Polyclonal long-term repopulating stem cell clones in a primate model

M Schmidt, P Zickler, G Hoffmann… - Blood, The Journal …, 2002 - ashpublications.org
M Schmidt, P Zickler, G Hoffmann, S Haas, M Wissler, A Muessig, JF Tisdale, K Kuramoto…
Blood, The Journal of the American Society of Hematology, 2002ashpublications.org
Hematopoietic bone marrow stem cells generate differentiated blood cells and, when
transplanted, may contribute to other organs, such as the brain, heart, and liver. An
understanding of in vivo clonal behavior of stem cells will have important implications for
cellular and gene therapy. For the first time, we have directly demonstrated the derivation of
circulating peripheral blood cells from individual stem cell clones. We analyzed the clonal
composition of retrovirus-marked peripheral blood leukocyte populations in 2 different …
Hematopoietic bone marrow stem cells generate differentiated blood cells and, when transplanted, may contribute to other organs, such as the brain, heart, and liver. An understanding of in vivo clonal behavior of stem cells will have important implications for cellular and gene therapy. For the first time, we have directly demonstrated the derivation of circulating peripheral blood cells from individual stem cell clones. We analyzed the clonal composition of retrovirus-marked peripheral blood leukocyte populations in 2 different primate models by a novel direct genomic sequencing technique allowing the identification of vector insertion sites. More than 80 contributing long-term hematopoietic clones were identified in individual rhesus macaque peripheral blood transplant recipients and more than 25 different clones in a baboon marrow transplant recipient. Up to 5 insertion sequences from each animal were used to trace the long-term contribution of stem cell clones in these primate models. Continuous and mostly pluripotent contributions of peripheral blood leukocytes from each of the traced clones could be detected for the entire follow-up period of 23 to 33 months. Our study provides direct molecular evidence for a polyclonal, multilineage, and sustained contribution of individual stem cells to primate hematopoiesis.
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