Jul 11, 2014
Opening-up the stem cell niche
For many years scientists have been trying to unravel
mechanisms that guide function and differentiation of blood
stem cells, those cells that generate all blood cells including
our immune system. The study of human blood stem cells is
difficult because they can only be found in the bone marrow in
specialized “niches” that cannot be recapitulated in a culture
dish. Now a group of scientists from Dresden led by stem cell
researcher Prof. Claudia Waskow (Technische Universität
Dresden) was able to generate a mouse model that supports the
transplantation of human blood stem cells despite the species
barrier and without the need for irradiation. They used a
mutation of the Kit receptor in the mouse stem cells to
facilitate the engraftment of human cells. In the new model
human blood stem cells can expand and differentiate into all
cell types of the blood without any additional treatment. Even
cells of the innate immune system that can normally not be
found in “humanized” mice were efficiently generated in this
mouse. Of significance is the fact that the stem cells can be
maintained in the mouse over a longer period of time compared
to previously existing mouse models. These results were now
published in the renowned journal “Cell Stem Cell”.
“Our goal was to develop an optimal model for the
transplantation and study of human blood stem cells,” says
Claudia Waskow, who recently took office of the professorship
for “animal models in hematopoiesis” at the medical faculty of
the TU Dresden. Before, Prof. Waskow was a group leader at the
DFG-Center for Regenerative Therapies Dresden where most of the
study was conducted. The trick used by Claudia Waskow’s team to
achieve optimal stem cell engraftment was the introduction of a
naturally occurring mutation of the Kit receptor into mice that
lack a functional immune system. This way they circumvented the
two major obstacles of blood stem cell transplantation: the
rejection by the recipient’s immune system and absence of free
niche space for the incoming donor stem cells in the
recipient’s bone marrow. Space is usually provided by
irradiation therapy, called conditioning, because it damages
and depletes the endogenous stem cells and thus frees space for
the incoming human cells. However, irradiation is toxic to many
cell types and can lead to strong side effects. The Kit
mutation in the new mouse model impairs the recipient’s stem
cell compartment in such a way that the endogenous blood stem
cells can be easily replaced by human donor stem cells with a
functional Kit receptor. This replacement works so efficiently
that irradiation can be completely omitted allowing the study
of human blood development in a physiological setting. The
model can now be used to study diseases of the human blood and
immune system or to test new treatment options.
The results from Prof. Waskow’s group also show that the Kit
receptor is important for the function of human blood stem
cells, notably in a transplantation setting. Further studies
will now focus on using this knowledge about the role of the
receptor to improve conditioning therapy in the setting of
therapeutic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation in
patients.
Publication:
Cosgun and Rahmig et al., Kit Regulates HSC Engraftment across
the Human-Mouse Species Barrier, Cell Stem Cell (2014),
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.stem.2014.06.001
Further information:
Technische Universität Dresden, Faculty of Medicine
Prof. Dr. Claudia Waskow
Regeneration in Hematopoiesis
Institute for Immunology
phone:+49(0)351 458 6448
http://tu-dresden.de/Members/claudia.waskow