Abstract

AbstractBone marrow (BM) CD34+ cells residing in the G0 phase of cell cycle may be the most suited candidates for the examination of cell cycle activation and proliferation of primitive hematopoietic progenitor cells (HPCs). We designed a double simultaneous labeling technique using both DNA and RNA staining with Hoechst 33342 and Pyronin Y, respectively, to isolate CD34+ cells residing in G0(G0CD34+ ). Using long-term BM cultures and limiting dilution analysis, G0CD34+ cells were found to be enriched for primitive HPCs. In vitro proliferation of G0CD34+ cells in response to sequential cytokine stimulation was examined in a two-step assay. In the first step, cells received a primary stimulation consisting of either stem cell factor (SCF), Flt3-ligand (FL), interleukin-3 (IL-3), or IL-6 for 7 days. In the second step, cells from each group were washed and split into four or more groups, each of which was cultured again for another week with one of the four primary cytokines individually, or in combination. Tracking of progeny cells was accomplished by staining cells with PKH2 on day 0 and with PKH26 on day 7. Overall examination of proliferation patterns over 2 weeks showed that cells could progress into four phases of proliferation. Phase I contained cytokine nonresponsive cells that failed to proliferate. Phase II contained cells dividing up to three times within the first 7 days. Phases III and IV consisted of cells dividing up to five divisions and greater than six divisions, respectively, by the end of the 14-day period. Regardless of the cytokine used for primary stimulation, G0CD34+ cells moved only to phase II by day 7, whereas a substantial percentage of cells incubated with SCF or FL remained in phase I. Cells cultured in SCF or FL for the entire 14-day period did not progress beyond phase III but proliferated into phase IV (with <20% of cells remaining in phases I and II) if IL-3, but not IL-6, was substituted for either cytokine on day 7. G0CD34+ cells incubated with IL-3 for 14 days proliferated the most and progressed into phase IV; however, when SCF was substituted on day 7, cells failed to proliferate into phase IV. Most intriguing was a group of cells, many of which were CD34+, detected in cultures initially stimulated with IL-3, which remained as a distinct population, mostly in G0 /G1 , unable to progress out of phase II regardless of the nature of the second stimulus received on day 7. A small percentage of these cells expressed cyclin E, suggesting that their proliferation arrest may have been mediated by a cyclin-related disruption in cell cycle. These results suggest that a programmed response to sequential cytokine stimulation may be part of a control mechanism required for maintenance of proliferation of primitive HPCs and that unscheduled stimulation of CD34+ cells residing in G0 may result in disruption of cell-cycle regulation.

Highlights

  • HEMATOPOIETIC STEM cells, and most likely primitive hematopoietic progenitor cells (HPCs), are believed to reside in a metabolically and mitotically dormant state within the bone marrow (BM) microenvironment.[1,2,3] In the context of the cell cycle, these cells, lie dormant within the specialized resting stage of G1 known as G0

  • This allowed for the identification of a group of cells constituting approximately 5% to 10% of the total cells analyzed, which were isolated as G0CD34/ cells

  • We examined CD34/ cells isolated in different stages of the cell cycle for their expression of the nuclear antigen Ki67.16,17 Expression of this nuclear antigen was least among cells isolated as G0 and highest among those sorted as S/G2 / M with G1 cells displaying an intermediate Ki67 expression

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Summary

Introduction

HEMATOPOIETIC STEM cells, and most likely primitive hematopoietic progenitor cells (HPCs), are believed to reside in a metabolically and mitotically dormant state within the bone marrow (BM) microenvironment.[1,2,3] In the context of the cell cycle, these cells, lie dormant within the specialized resting stage of G1 known as G0. From the Division of Hematology/Oncology and Indiana Elks Cancer Research Center, Department of Medicine and the Department of Pediatrics, Herman B Wells Center for Pediatric Research, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, IN. Examination of the effects of hematopoietic growth factors and cytokines on proliferation and differentiation of HPCs allowed for a general classification of these mediators as early- or late-acting cytokines.[5] We speculated that to examine hematopoietic cell activation and the direct effects of individual cytokines on cell cycle progression of dormant HPCs, it was essential to obtain mitotically homogeneous populations of cells, preferably in G0

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