Écrit par Weill Cornell Medical College			
				
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				21 Mars 2013			
			
				
		
				
				
		 Research Shows Fewer Donor Cells May Be Needed for Transplantation and Bone Marrow Banking May Be Possible
Research Shows Fewer Donor Cells May Be Needed for Transplantation and Bone Marrow Banking May Be Possible
NEW YORK (March 21, 2013) --  More than 50,000 stem cell transplants are performed each year  worldwide. A research team led by Weill Cornell Medical College  investigators may have solved a major issue of expanding adult  hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) outside the human body for clinical use  in bone marrow transplantation -- a critical step towards producing a  large supply of blood stem cells needed to restore a healthy blood  system.
In  the journal Blood, Weill Cornell researchers and collaborators from  Memorial-Sloan Kettering Cancer Center describe how they engineered a  protein to amplify adult HSCs once they were extracted from the bone  marrow of a donor. The engineered protein maintains the expanded HSCs in  a stem-like state -- meaning, they will not differentiate into  specialized blood cell types before they are transplanted in the  recipient's bone marrow.
Finding  a bone marrow donor match is challenging and the number of bone marrow  cells from a single harvest procedure are often not sufficient for a  transplant. Additional rounds of bone marrow harvest and clinical  applications to mobilize blood stem cells are often required. 
However,  an expansion of healthy HSCs in the lab would mean that fewer stem  cells need to be retrieved from donors. It also suggests that adult  blood stem cells could be frozen and banked for future expansion and use  -- which is not currently possible. 
"Our  work demonstrates that we can overcome a major technical hurdle in the  expansion of adult blood stem cells, making it possible, for the first  time, to produce them on an industrial scale," says the study's senior  investigator, Dr. Pengbo Zhou, professor of pathology and laboratory  medicine at Weill Cornell. 
If  the technology by Weill Cornell passes future testing hurdles, Dr. Zhou  believes bone marrow banks could take a place alongside blood banks.
"The  immediate goal is for us to see if we can take fewer blood stem cells  from a donor and expand them for transplant. That way more people may be  more likely to donate," Dr. Zhou says. "If many people donate, then we  can type the cells before we freeze and bank them, so that we will know  all the immune characteristics. The hope is that when a patient needs a  bone marrow transplant to treat cancer or another disease, we can find  the cells that match, expand them and use them."
Eventually,  individuals may choose to bank their own marrow for potential future  use, Dr. Zhou says. "Not only are a person's own blood stem cells the  best therapy for many blood cancers, but they may also be useful for  other purposes, such as to slow aging."
A Scrambled Destruction Signal
Bone  marrow is the home of HSCs that produce all blood cells, including all  types of immune cells. One treatment for patients with blood cancers  produced by abnormal blood cells is to remove the unhealthy marrow and  transplant healthy blood stem cells from a donor. Patients with some  cancers may also need a bone marrow transplant when anticancer  treatments damage the blood. Bone marrow transplantation can also be  used to treat other disorders, such as immune deficiency disorders.
The  process of donating bone marrow, however, can be arduous and painful,  requiring extraction of marrow with a needle from a large bone under  general anesthesia. A donor may also need to undergo the procedure  multiple times in order to provide enough stem cells for the recipient. 
Because  of these issues of extracting donor bone marrow, there have been a  number of attempts to expand HSCs that have focused on the transcription  factor HOXB4, which stimulates HSCs to make copies of themselves. "The  more HOXB4 protein there is in stem cells, the more they will self-renew  and expand their population," Dr. Zhou says.
But  all previous efforts are limited in their applicability. HSCs are  notoriously refractory to gene transfer. Virus-based vehicles are thus  far the most efficient means to deliver therapeutic genes into HSCs in  the laboratory setting. In the past, scientists used a virus as a  vehicle to deliver a therapeutic gene into patients with severe combined  immunodeficiency disease (SCID) to correct their immune deficiency.  However, four children receiving SCID gene therapy developed  treatment-related leukemia due to the inability to control where the  virus inserts itself in the genome, often on the so-called "hot spots"  that activate oncogenes or inactivate tumor suppressor genes. Also,  other investigators have shown that it is possible to directly insert  HOXB4 protein into extracted bone marrow stem cells. "All you do is add a  little tag to the protein, which acts like a vehicle, driving the  proteins through the cell membrane, directly into the nucleus," Dr. Zhou  says. "But the half-life of the natural protein is very short -- about  one hour. So that means that in order to expand blood stem cells, these  HOXB4 proteins have to be added all the time. Because the proteins are  very costly, this process is both expensive and impractical."
Dr.  Zhou and his team, in collaboration with Dr. Malcolm A. S. Moore's  group from Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, took a different  approach.  They examined why HOXB4 protein doesn't last long in HSCs,  once these cells are removed from the protective stem cell niche that  they nest quietly in. They found that HOXB4 is targeted for degradation  so that stem cells can start differentiating -- that is, turn into  different kinds of adult blood cells. "HOXB4 prevents blood stem cells  from differentiating, while, at the same time, allows them to renew  themselves," Dr. Zhou says.
The  researchers found that a protein, CUL4, is tasked with recognizing  HOXB4 and tagging it for destruction by the cell's protein destruction  apparatus. They discovered that CUL4 recognizes HOXB4 because it "sees" a  set of four amino acids on the protein. "HOXB4 carries a destruction  signal that CUL4 recognizes and acts on," Dr. Zhou says.
The  research team engineered a synthetic HOXB4 protein with a scrambled  destruction signal. They produced large quantities of the protein in  bacteria, and then delivered the protein into human blood stem cells in  the laboratory. "When you mask the CUL4 degradation signal, HOXB4's  half-life expands for up to 10 hours," Dr. Zhou says. "The engineered  HOXB4 did its job to expand the stem cell, while keeping all its stem  cell properties intact. As a result, cells receiving the engineered  HOXB4 demonstrated superior expansion capacity than those given natural  HOXB4 protein. Animal studies demonstrated that the transplanted  engineered human stem cells can retain their stem cell-like qualities in  mouse bone marrow."
Dr.  Zhou says the engineered protein HOXB4 can potentially be administered  every 10 hours or so to make the quantity of blood stem cells necessary  for patient transplant and for banking.
"This  is the ultimate goal for what we are trying to achieve," he says.  "There are likely many roadblocks ahead to reach our goals, but we  appear to have found ways to deal with one major hurdle of adult  hematopoietic stem cell expansion."
Cornell  Center for Technology Enterprise and Commercialization (CCTEC), on  behalf of Cornell University, has filed a patent application that covers  the work described here. 
Other  co-authors include Dr. Jennifer Lee, Dr. Jianxuan Zhang, Dr. Liren Liu,  Dr. Yue Zhang, and Dr. Jae Yong Eom from Weill Cornell Medical College;  Dr. Giovanni Morrone from the University of Catanzaro "Magna Graecia,"  Catanzaro, Italy; and Dr. Jae-Hung Shieh from the Cell Biology Program,  Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center. 
The  study was supported by grants from the National Institutes of Health  (CA118085, CA098210 and NIHA12008023), the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society  Scholar Award and the Irma T. Hirschl Career Scientist Award. 
Weill Cornell Medical College
Weill  Cornell Medical College, Cornell University's medical school located in  New York City, is committed to excellence in research, teaching,  patient care and the advancement of the art and science of medicine,  locally, nationally and globally. Physicians and scientists of Weill  Cornell Medical College are engaged in cutting-edge research from bench  to bedside, aimed at unlocking mysteries of the human body in health and  sickness and toward developing new treatments and prevention  strategies. In its commitment to global health and education, Weill  Cornell has a strong presence in places such as Qatar, Tanzania, Haiti,  Brazil, Austria and Turkey. Through the historic Weill Cornell Medical  College in Qatar, the Medical College is the first in the U.S. to offer  its M.D. degree overseas. Weill Cornell is the birthplace of many  medical advances -- including the development of the Pap test for  cervical cancer, the synthesis of penicillin, the first successful  embryo-biopsy pregnancy and birth in the U.S., the first clinical trial  of gene therapy for Parkinson's disease, and most recently, the world's  first successful use of deep brain stimulation to treat a minimally  conscious brain-injured patient. Weill Cornell Medical College is  affiliated with NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital, where its faculty  provides comprehensive patient care at NewYork-Presbyterian  Hospital/Weill Cornell Medical Center. The Medical College is also  affiliated with the Methodist Hospital in Houston. For more information,  visit weill.cornell.edu.