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All Hematopoietic Stem Cells Engraft in Submyeloablatively Irradiated Mice

Publication at First Faculty of Medicine |
2013

Abstract

Significant controversy exists regarding the impact of hematopoietic stroma damage by irradiation on the efficiency of engraftment of intravenously transplanted stem cells. It was previously demonstrated that in normal syngenic mice, all intravenously transplanted donor stem cells, present in the bone marrow, compete equally with those of the host.

In this study, we comprehensively compared the blood cell production derived from transplanted donor stem cells with that from the host stem cells surviving various doses of submyeloablative irradiation. We compared the partial chimerism resulting from transplantation with theoretical estimates that assumed transplantation efficiencies ranging from 100% to 20%.

The highest level of consensus between the experimental and the theoretical results was 100% for homing and engraftment (ie, the utilization of all transplanted stem cells). These results point to a very potent mechanism through which intravenously administered hematopoietic stem cells are captured from circulation, engraft in the hematopoietic tissue, and contribute to blood cell production in irradiated recipients.

The damage done to hematopoietic stroma and to the trabecular bone by submyeloablative doses of ionizing radiation does not negatively affect the homing and engraftment mechanisms of intravenously transplanted hematopoietic progenitor and stem cells. (C) 2013 American Society for Blood and Marrow Transplantation.