Islamabad, Jan 29: Scientists with the new
Children's Research Institute at UT Southwestern Medical Center have identified
the environment in which blood-forming stem cells survive and thrive within the
body, an important step toward increasing the safety and effectiveness of
bone-marrow transplantation.
Institute investigators led by Dr. Sean
Morrison asked which cells are responsible for the microenvironment that
nurtures haematopoietic stem cells, which produce billions of new blood cells
every day. The answer: endothelial and perivascular cells, which line blood
vessels.
"Although scientists have searched for decades to identify the
stem cell home, this is the first study to reveal the cells that are
functionally responsible for the maintenance of blood-forming stem cells in the
body," said Dr. Morrison, director of the new institute and senior author of the
study available Jan. 26 in Nature. "This discovery will lead to the
identification of the mechanisms by which cells promote stem cell maintenance
and expansion."
Scientists already have determined how to make large
quantities of stem cells and how to change these cells into those of the nervous
system, skin and other tissues. But they have been stymied by similar efforts to
make blood-forming stem cells. A key obstacle has been the lack of understanding
about the microenvironment, or niche, in which blood-forming stem cells reside
in the body.
In the first breakthrough from the Children's Research
Institute, Dr. Morrison's laboratory addressed this issue by systematically
determining which cells are the sources of stem cell factor, a protein required
for the maintenance of blood-forming stem cells. His team swapped out the mouse
gene responsible for stem cell factor with a gene from jellyfish that encodes
green fluorescent protein. The cells that glowed green were endothelial and
perivascular cells, revealing them as the creators of the niche that nurtures
healthy blood-forming stem cells.
Additional lab work showed that
blood-forming stem cells become depleted if stem cell factor is eliminated from
either endothelial or perivascular cells. Loss of stem cell factor from both of
these sources caused stem cells to virtually disappear.
The research has
implications for bone marrow and umbilical cord blood transplants, Dr. Morrison
said. If scientists can identify the remaining signals by which perivascular
cells promote the expansion of blood-forming stem cells, then they may be able
to replicate these signals in the laboratory. Doing so will make it possible to
expand blood-forming stem cells prior to transplantation into patients, thereby
increasing the safety and effectiveness of this widely used clinical
procedure.
Dr. Morrison's paper is the first to emerge from the
Children's Research Institute at UT Southwestern, a pioneering venture that
combines the medical center's research prowess with the world-class clinical
expertise of Children's Medical Center Dallas. Under Dr. Morrison's leadership,
the institute is focusing on research at the interface of stem cell biology,
cancer, and metabolism that has the potential to reveal new strategies for
treating disease.
The institute currently has more than 30 scientists and
will eventually include 150 scientists in 15 laboratories led by UT Southwestern
faculty members. Dr. Morrison's lab focuses on adult stem cell biology and
cancers of the blood, nervous system and skin.
Ends
SA/EN
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» Environment that nurtures blood-forming stem cells' growth identified
Environment that nurtures blood-forming stem cells' growth identified
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