References
Items 709 to 720 of 7990 total
- Shaffer RG et al. (MAR 2006) Cytometry. Part B, Clinical cytometry 70 2 56--62
Flow cytometric measurement of circulating endothelial cells: the effect of age and peripheral arterial disease on baseline levels of mature and progenitor populations.
BACKGROUND: Age and cardiovascular disease status appear to alter numbers and function of circulating endothelial progenitor cells (EPCs). Despite no universal phenotypic definition, numerous studies have implicated progenitors with apparent endothelial potential in local responses to vascular injury and with cardiovascular disease in general. To further define the role of this lineage in peripheral artery disease (PAD), we developed a multiparameter flow cytometry assay to analyze multiple phenotypic definitions of progenitor cells (PCs), EPCs, and mature endothelial cells (ECs) and evaluate effects of age and PAD on baseline levels of each subset. METHODS: Blood was collected from young healthy subjects (N = 9, mean age 33 +/- 8 years), older healthy subjects (N = 13, mean age 66 +/- 8 years), and older subjects with PAD (N = 15, mean age 69 +/- 8 years). After ammonium chloride lysis, cells were stained and analyzed on a Becton-Dickinson LSR II with a 5-color antibody panel: FITC-anti-CD31, PE-anti-CD146, PE-anti-CD133, PerCP-Cy5.5-anti-CD3,-CD19,-CD33 (lineage panel), PE-Cy7-anti-CD34, and APC-anti-VEGF-R2. Viability was assessed by propidium iodide exclusion, and only viable, low to medium side scatter lineage-negative singlets were analyzed. In some studies, cells were sorted for morphological studies. Subsets were defined as indicated later. RESULTS: Our results, using a comprehensive flow cytometric panel, indicate that CD133+, CD34+, and CD133+/CD34+ PCs are elevated in younger healthy individuals compared to older individuals, both healthy and with PAD. However, the number of EPCs and mature ECs did not significantly differ among the three groups. Assessment of endothelial colony forming units and dual acLDL-lectin staining supported the flow cytometric findings. CONCLUSIONS: We describe a comprehensive flow cytometric method to detect circulating mature and progenitor endothelial populations confirmed by conventional morphological and functional assays. Our findings suggest that aging may influence circulating levels of PCs, but not EPCs or ECs; PAD had no effect on baseline levels of any populations investigated. This study provides the basis for evaluating the potential effects of acute stress and therapeutic intervention on circulating progenitor and endothelial populations as a biomarker for cardiovascular status.Cohen-Haguenauer O et al. (FEB 2006) Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 103 7 2340--5In vivo repopulation ability of genetically corrected bone marrow cells from Fanconi anemia patients.
Fanconi anemia (FA) is a rare inherited genomic instability syndrome representing one of the best examples of hematopoietic stem cell deficiency. Although FA might be an excellent candidate for bone marrow (BM) genetic correction ex vivo, knockout animal models are not sufficient to guide preclinical steps, and gene therapy attempts have proven disappointing so far. Contributing to these poor results is a characteristic and dramatic early BM-cells die-off when placed in culture. We show here that human primary FA BM cell survival can be ameliorated by using specific culture conditions that limit oxidative stress. When coupled with retrovirus-mediated transfer of the main complementation group FANCA-cDNA, we could achieve long-term reconstitution of the stem cell compartment both in vitro and in vivo. Gene-corrected BM cultures grew for textgreater120 days, and after cultured cell transplantation into NOD/SCID mice, clonogenic human cells carrying the FANCA transgene could be detected 6 months after transduction. By comparison, untransduced cells died in culture by 15 days. Of necessity for ethical reasons, experiments were conducted on a very limited number of primary BM cells. By using low cytokine regimen and conditions matching regulatory requirements, a contingent of gene-corrected cells slowly emerges with an unmet potential for in vivo engraftment. Future therapeutic applications of stem cells might be expanding from these data. In addition, we provide a model of gene-corrected human primary cell growth that carries the potential to better delineate the combined role of both DNA damage and oxidative stress in the pathogenesis of FA.Catalog #: Product Name: 04436 MethoCultâ„¢ SF H4436 Catalog #: 04436 Product Name: MethoCultâ„¢ SF H4436 Zhang CC et al. (FEB 2006) Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 103 7 2184--9Prion protein is expressed on long-term repopulating hematopoietic stem cells and is important for their self-renewal.
Although the wild-type prion protein (PrP) is abundant and widely expressed in various types of tissues and cells, its physiological function(s) remain unknown, and PrP knockout mice do not exhibit overt and undisputed phenotypes. Here we showed that PrP is expressed on the surface of several bone marrow cell populations successively enriched in long-term (LT) hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) using flow cytometry analysis. Affinity purification of the PrP-positive and -negative fractions from these populations, followed by competitive bone marrow reconstitution assays, shows that all LT HSCs express PrP. HSCs from PrP-null bone marrow exhibited impaired self-renewal in serial transplantation of lethally irradiated mouse recipients both in the presence and absence of competitors. When treated with a cell cycle-specific myelotoxic agent, the animals reconstituted with PrP-null HSCs exhibit increased sensitivity to hematopoietic cell depletion. Ectopic expression of PrP in PrP-null bone marrow cells by retroviral infection rescued the defective hematopoietic engraftment during serial transplantation. Therefore, PrP is a marker for HSCs and supports their self-renewal.Catalog #: Product Name: 03434 MethoCultâ„¢ GF M3434 09600 StemSpanâ„¢ SFEM 03630 MethoCultâ„¢ M3630 28600 L-Calcâ„¢ Software Catalog #: 03434 Product Name: MethoCultâ„¢ GF M3434 Catalog #: 09600 Product Name: StemSpanâ„¢ SFEM Catalog #: 03630 Product Name: MethoCultâ„¢ M3630 Catalog #: 28600 Product Name: L-Calcâ„¢ Software Wullschleger S et al. ( 2006) Cell 124 3 471--484TOR signaling in growth and metabolism.
The target of rapamycin (TOR) is a conserved Ser/Thr kinase that regulates cell growth and metabolism in response to environmental cues. Here, highlighting contributions from studies in model organisms, we review mammalian TOR complexes and the signaling branches they mediate. TOR is part of two distinct multiprotein complexes, TOR complex 1 (TORC1), which is sensitive to rapamycin, and TORC2, which is not. The physiological consequences of mammalian TORC1 dysregulation suggest that inhibitors of mammalian TOR may be useful in the treatment of cancer, cardiovascular disease, autoimmunity, and metabolic disorders.Catalog #: Product Name: 73122 Everolimus Catalog #: 73122 Product Name: Everolimus Santoni de Sio FR et al. (JUN 2006) Blood 107 11 4257--65Proteasome activity restricts lentiviral gene transfer into hematopoietic stem cells and is down-regulated by cytokines that enhance transduction.
The therapeutic potential of hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) gene therapy can be fully exploited only by reaching efficient gene transfer into HSCs without compromising their biologic properties. Although HSCs can be transduced by HIV-derived lentiviral vectors (LVs) in short ex vivo culture, they display low permissivity to the vector, requiring cytokine stimulation to reach high-frequency transduction. Using stringent assays of competitive xenograft repopulation, we show that early-acting cytokines synergistically enhanced human HSC gene transfer by LVs without impairing engraftment and repopulation capacity. Using S-phase suicide assays, we show that transduction enhancement by cytokines was not dependent on cell cycle progression and that LVs can transduce quiescent HSCs. Pharmacologic inhibition of the proteasome during transduction dramatically enhanced HSC gene transfer, allowing the reach of very high levels of vector integration in their progeny in vivo. Thus, LVs are effectively restricted at a postentry step by the activity of this proteolytic complex. Unexpectedly, cytokine stimulation rapidly and substantially down-regulated proteasome activity in hematopoietic progenitors, highlighting one mechanism by which cytokines may enhance permissiveness to LV gene transfer. These findings demonstrate that antiviral responses ultimately mediated by proteasomes strongly limit the efficiency of HSC transduction by LVs and establish improved conditions for HSC-based gene therapy.Catalog #: Product Name: 09600 StemSpanâ„¢ SFEM Catalog #: 09600 Product Name: StemSpanâ„¢ SFEM Fé et al. (MAR 2006) The Journal of clinical investigation 116 3 715--23Blocking the alpha 4 integrin-paxillin interaction selectively impairs mononuclear leukocyte recruitment to an inflammatory site.
Antagonists to alpha4 integrin show promise for several autoimmune and inflammatory diseases but may exhibit mechanism-based toxicities. We tested the capacity of blockade of alpha4 integrin signaling to perturb functions involved in inflammation, while limiting potential adverse effects. We generated and characterized mice bearing a Y991A mutation in alpha4 integrin [alpha4(Y991A) mice], which blocks paxillin binding and inhibits alpha4 integrin signals that support leukocyte migration. In contrast to the embryonic-lethal phenotype of alpha4 integrin-null mice, mice bearing the alpha4(Y991A) mutation were viable and fertile; however, they exhibited defective recruitment of mononuclear leukocytes into thioglycollate-induced peritonitis. Alpha4 integrins are essential for definitive hematopoiesis; however, the alpha4(Y991A) mice had intact lymphohematopoiesis and, with the exception of reduced Peyer's patches, normal architecture and cellularity of secondary lymphoid tissues. We conclude that interference with alpha4 integrin signaling can selectively impair mononuclear leukocyte recruitment to sites of inflammation while sparing vital functions of alpha4 integrins in development and hematopoiesis.Catalog #: Product Name: 03434 MethoCultâ„¢ GF M3434 04970 MegaCultâ„¢-C Complete Kit Without Cytokines 04900 MegaCultâ„¢-C Medium Without Cytokines 04960 MegaCultâ„¢-C Collagen and Medium Without Cytokines Catalog #: 03434 Product Name: MethoCultâ„¢ GF M3434 Catalog #: 04970 Product Name: MegaCultâ„¢-C Complete Kit Without Cytokines Catalog #: 04900 Product Name: MegaCultâ„¢-C Medium Without Cytokines Catalog #: 04960 Product Name: MegaCultâ„¢-C Collagen and Medium Without Cytokines Heinonen KM et al. (FEB 2006) Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 103 8 2776--81Protein tyrosine phosphatase 1B negatively regulates macrophage development through CSF-1 signaling.
Protein tyrosine phosphatase 1B (PTP-1B) is a ubiquitously expressed cytosolic phosphatase with the ability to dephosphorylate JAK2 and TYK2, and thereby down-regulate cytokine receptor signaling. Furthermore, PTP-1B levels are up-regulated in certain chronic myelogenous leukemia patients, which points to a potential role for PTP-1B in myeloid development. The results presented here show that the absence of PTP-1B affects murine myelopoiesis by modifying the ratio of monocytes to granulocytes in vivo. This bias toward monocytic development is at least in part due to a decreased threshold of response to CSF-1, because the PTP-1B -/- bone marrow presents no abnormalities at the granulocyte-monocyte progenitor level but produces significantly more monocytic colonies in the presence of CSF-1. This phenomenon is not due to an increase in receptor levels but rather to enhanced phosphorylation of the activation loop tyrosine. PTP-1B -/- cells display increased inflammatory activity in vitro and in vivo through the constitutive up-regulation of activation markers as well as increased sensitivity to endotoxin. Collectively, our data indicate that PTP-1B is an important modulator of myeloid differentiation and macrophage activation in vivo and provide a demonstration of a physiological role for PTP-1B in immune regulation.Catalog #: Product Name: 03434 MethoCultâ„¢ GF M3434 03231 MethoCultâ„¢ M3231 Catalog #: 03434 Product Name: MethoCultâ„¢ GF M3434 Catalog #: 03231 Product Name: MethoCultâ„¢ M3231 Wernig G et al. (JUN 2006) Blood 107 11 4274--81Expression of Jak2V617F causes a polycythemia vera-like disease with associated myelofibrosis in a murine bone marrow transplant model.
An acquired somatic mutation, Jak2V617F, was recently discovered in most patients with polycythemia vera (PV), chronic idiopathic myelofibrosis (CIMF), and essential thrombocythemia (ET). To investigate the role of this mutation in vivo, we transplanted bone marrow (BM) transduced with a retrovirus expressing either Jak2 wild-type (wt) or Jak2V617F into lethally irradiated syngeneic recipient mice. Expression of Jak2V617F, but not Jak2wt, resulted in clinicopathologic features that closely resembled PV in humans. These included striking elevation in hemoglobin level/hematocrit, leukocytosis, megakaryocyte hyperplasia, extramedullary hematopoiesis resulting in splenomegaly, and reticulin fibrosis in the bone marrow. Histopathologic and flow cytometric analyses showed an increase in maturing myeloid lineage progenitors, although megakaryocytes showed decreased polyploidization and staining for acetylcholinesterase. In vitro analysis of primary cells showed constitutive activation of Stat5 and cytokine-independent growth of erythroid colony-forming unit (CFU-E) and erythropoietin hypersensitivity, and Southern blot analysis for retroviral integration indicated that the disease was oligoclonal. Furthermore, we observed strain-specific differences in phenotype, with Balb/c mice demonstrating markedly elevated leukocyte counts, splenomegaly, and reticulin fibrosis compared with C57Bl/6 mice. We conclude that Jak2V617F expression in bone marrow progenitors results in a PV-like syndrome with myelofibrosis and that there are strain-specific modifiers that may in part explain phenotypic pleiotropy of Jak2V617F-associated myeloproliferative disease in humans.Catalog #: Product Name: 04970 MegaCultâ„¢-C Complete Kit Without Cytokines 04971 MegaCultâ„¢-C Complete Kit with Cytokines 04900 MegaCultâ„¢-C Medium Without Cytokines 04901 MegaCultâ„¢-C Medium with Cytokines 04960 MegaCultâ„¢-C Collagen and Medium Without Cytokines 04961 MegaCultâ„¢-C Collagen and Medium with Cytokines Catalog #: 04970 Product Name: MegaCultâ„¢-C Complete Kit Without Cytokines Catalog #: 04971 Product Name: MegaCultâ„¢-C Complete Kit with Cytokines Catalog #: 04900 Product Name: MegaCultâ„¢-C Medium Without Cytokines Catalog #: 04901 Product Name: MegaCultâ„¢-C Medium with Cytokines Catalog #: 04960 Product Name: MegaCultâ„¢-C Collagen and Medium Without Cytokines Catalog #: 04961 Product Name: MegaCultâ„¢-C Collagen and Medium with Cytokines Nika K et al. (MAR 2006) Molecular and cellular biology 26 5 1806--16Lipid raft targeting of hematopoietic protein tyrosine phosphatase by protein kinase C theta-mediated phosphorylation.
Protein kinase C theta (PKC theta) is unique among PKC isozymes in its translocation to the center of the immune synapse in T cells and its unique downstream signaling. Here we show that the hematopoietic protein tyrosine phosphatase (HePTP) also accumulates in the immune synapse in a PKC theta-dependent manner upon antigen recognition by T cells and is phosphorylated by PKC theta at Ser-225, which is required for lipid raft translocation. Immune synapse translocation was completely absent in antigen-specific T cells from PKC theta-/- mice. In intact T cells, HePTP-S225A enhanced T-cell receptor (TCR)-induced NFAT/AP-1 transactivation, while the acidic substitution mutant was as efficient as wild-type HePTP. We conclude that HePTP is phosphorylated in the immune synapse by PKC theta and thereby targeted to lipid rafts to temper TCR signaling. This represents a novel mechanism for the active immune synapse recruitment and activation of a phosphatase in TCR signaling.Catalog #: Product Name: 15621 RosetteSepâ„¢ Human CD3 Depletion Cocktail Catalog #: 15621 Product Name: RosetteSepâ„¢ Human CD3 Depletion Cocktail Thum T et al. (APR 2006) Cardiovascular research 70 1 50--60Bone marrow molecular alterations after myocardial infarction: Impact on endothelial progenitor cells.
OBJECTIVE: Standard drugs post-myocardial infarction (MI) such as angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) and 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl-coenzyme A (HMG-CoA) reductase inhibitors (statins) increase levels of endothelial progenitor cells (EPC). However, potential underlying mechanisms have not yet been investigated. METHODS AND RESULTS: We studied the effects of ACE inhibition or statin treatment on EPC levels and on bone marrow molecular pathways involved in EPC mobilization after MI in rats. Three days post-infarction, acetylated LDL (acLDL)+/Ulex europeus-1 (UEA-1)+/VEGF receptor-2+/eNOS+ EPC levels and formation of endothelial colony forming units (CFU) were reduced to 60+/-12% (p textless 0.05) and 68+/-7% (p textless 0.05). In bone marrow, extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) phosphorylation and matrix metalloproteinase (MMP)-9 activity were repressed. Endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS) activity was unchanged, whereas reactive oxygen species (ROS) were increased two-fold in bone marrow. ACE or HMG-CoA reductase inhibition resulted in significant increases in EPC levels. ACE inhibition increased bone marrow ERK phosphorylation and MMP-9 activity. Statin therapy enhanced bone marrow VEGF protein levels, Akt phosphorylation, eNOS activity and normalized increased ROS levels. Augmented EPC levels in the early post-infarction phase by ACE inhibition or statin treatment were associated with improved cardiac function and increased capillary density in the peri-infarct area 7 days after MI. Moreover, increased EPC levels in response to ACE inhibition or statin treatment were sustained 10 weeks post-infarction. CONCLUSIONS: Increased ROS and impaired MMP-9 activity in bone marrow likely contribute to reduced EPC mobilization in the early post-infarction phase. ACE inhibition or statin treatment increased EPC levels with distinct drug-specific effects on bone marrow molecular alterations.Heo K et al. (JUN 2006) Stem cells (Dayton, Ohio) 24 6 1549--55Involvement of Niemann-Pick type C2 protein in hematopoiesis regulation.
Niemann-Pick type C2 (NPC2) protein has been characterized as a cholesterol-binding protein. Its loss leads to NPC2 disease, an inherited neurodegenerative disorder. When analyzing gene expression profile, we noticed high expression of both NPC2 and its receptor, mannose 6-phosphate receptor (MPR), in murine hematopoietic stem cells. NPC2 protein, in the presence of thrombopoietin (TPO), causes an increase in CFU-GEMM (colony-forming unit-granulocyte-erythroid-macrophage-megakaryocyte) and a decrease in CFU-GM (colony-forming unit-granulocyte-macrophage) colony number in colony-forming cell (CFC) assays. This effect is independent of cholesterol binding but does require the presence of MPR. With M07e cells, a TPO-dependent hematopoietic leukemia cell line, NPC2 can inhibit TPO-induced differentiation and enhance TPO-mediated anti-apoptosis effects. Strikingly, these results are not observed under the standard 20% O(2) level of the standard incubator, but rather at 7% O(2), the physiological oxygen level of bone marrow. Furthermore, NPC2 protein upregulates hypoxia inducible factor 1-alpha protein level at 7% O(2), but not at 20% O(2). Our results demonstrate that NPC2 protein plays a role in hematopoiesis at the physiologic bone marrow level of O(2).Catalog #: Product Name: 03334 MethoCultâ„¢ M3334 Catalog #: 03334 Product Name: MethoCultâ„¢ M3334 Starlets D et al. (JUN 2006) Blood 107 12 4807--16Cell-surface CD74 initiates a signaling cascade leading to cell proliferation and survival.
CD74 is an integral membrane protein that was thought to function mainly as an MHC class II chaperone. However, CD74 was recently shown to have a role as an accessory-signaling molecule. Our studies demonstrated that CD74 regulates B-cell differentiation by inducing a pathway leading to the activation of transcription mediated by the NF-kappaB p65/RelA homodimer and its coactivator, TAF(II)105. Here, we show that CD74 stimulation with anti-CD74 antibody leads to an induction of a signaling cascade resulting in NF-kappaB activation, entry of the stimulated cells into the S phase, elevation of DNA synthesis, cell division, and augmented expression of BCL-X(L). These studies therefore demonstrate that surface CD74 functions as a survival receptor.Catalog #: Product Name: 15024 RosetteSepâ„¢ Human B Cell Enrichment Cocktail Catalog #: 15024 Product Name: RosetteSepâ„¢ Human B Cell Enrichment Cocktail Items 709 to 720 of 7990 total
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