Differential Effects of HOXB4 on Nonhuman Primate Short- and Long-Term Repopulating Cells
Open Access
- 2 May 2006
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Public Library of Science (PLoS) in PLoS Medicine
- Vol. 3 (5) , e173
- https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.0030173
Abstract
Hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) or repopulating cells are able to self-renew and differentiate into cells of all hematopoietic lineages, and they can be enriched using the CD34 cell surface marker. Because of this unique property, HSCs have been used for HSC transplantation and gene therapy applications. However, the inability to expand HSCs has been a significant limitation for clinical applications. Here we examine, in a clinically relevant nonhuman primate model, the ability of HOXB4 to expand HSCs to potentially overcome this limitation. Using a competitive repopulation assay, we directly compared in six animals engraftment of HOXB4GFP (HOXB4 green fluorescent protein) and control (yellow fluorescent protein [YFP])–transduced and expanded CD34+ cells. In three animals, cells were infused after a 3-d transduction culture, while in three other animals cells were infused after an additional 6–9 d of ex vivo expansion. We demonstrate that HOXB4 overexpression resulted in superior engraftment in all animals. The most dramatic effect of HOXB4 was observed early after transplantation, resulting in an up to 56-fold higher engraftment compared to the control cells. At 6 mo after transplantation, the proportion of marker gene–expressing cells in peripheral blood was still up to 5-fold higher for HOXB4GFP compared to YFP-transduced cells. These data demonstrate that HOXB4 overexpression in CD34+ cells has a dramatic effect on expansion and engraftment of short-term repopulating cells and a significant, but less pronounced, effect on long-term repopulating cells. These data should have important implications for the expansion and transplantation of HSCs, in particular for cord blood transplantations where often only suboptimal numbers of HSCs are available.Keywords
This publication has 40 references indexed in Scilit:
- Polyclonal chemoprotection against temozolomide in a large-animal model of drug resistance gene therapyBlood, 2005
- Constitutively active Notch4 promotes early human hematopoietic progenitor cell maintenance while inhibiting differentiation and causes lymphoid abnormalities in vivoBlood, 2004
- Molecular interactions involved in HOXB4-induced activation of HSC self-renewalBlood, 2004
- Efficient Gene Transfer to Hematopoietic Repopulating Cells Using Concentrated RD114-Pseudotype Vectors Produced by Human Packaging CellsMolecular Therapy, 2004
- Induction of cytotoxic T-lymphocyte responses to enhanced green and yellow fluorescent proteins after myeloablative conditioningBlood, 2004
- A role for Wnt signalling in self-renewal of haematopoietic stem cellsNature, 2003
- High-level ectopic HOXB4 expression confers a profound in vivo competitive growth advantage on human cord blood CD34+ cells, but impairs lymphomyeloid differentiationBlood, 2003
- Ex vivo culture with human brain endothelial cells increases the SCID-repopulating capacity of adult human bone marrowBlood, 2002
- Highly efficient gene transfer into baboon marrow repopulating cells using GALV-pseudotype oncoretroviral vectors produced by human packaging cellsBlood, 2002
- Deregulated expression of HOXB4 enhances the primitive growth activity of human hematopoietic cellsBlood, 2002