Abstract

Abstract The differences of engraftment kinetics after umbilical cord blood (CB) and mobilized peripheral blood (MPB) transplantation are not yet fully understood. Since homing into bone marrow microenvironment would certainly play crucial role during engraftment, we have investigated adhesion capacities of CB and MPB CD34 + cells to bone marrow stromal cells (SC) and expression of several molecules known to be important during homing process. Cells, at day 0 and after 48 hour culture with SCF+ IL-3, are plated for 2 hours on BM confluent stromal layer. The non adherent (na) and adherent (a) fractions are then recovered. Cells are counted and evaluated for the coexpression of CD34 and VLA-4 (CD49d), VLA-5 (CD49e), L-selectin (CD62L) or CXCR4. The adhesion molecule expression is expressed in term of antigen density (Mean Equivalent Soluble Fluorescence (MESF)x 10 3 ). Our results show that a) cell adhesion capacity is significantly increased after culture in CB (78.6±4.0% vs 58.2±7.4%) as well in MPB (72.5±5.9% vs 51.5±5.4%) and is not different between the two sources of progenitors; b) VLA-4, VLA-5, CD62L and CXCR4 expression increased significantly after culture, in CB and in MPB; c) no specific expression on adherent cells could be observed except for L-selectin after 48h culture; d) the only significant difference between CB and MPB concerns the CXCR4 expression,lower on PB cells but independent of cell adhesion capacities. In conclusions, it seems that neither adhesion capacities nor expression of evaluated adhesion molecules could explain differences between CB and MPB engraftment.

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