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Bone marrow transplantation to hosts with regenerating hematopoiesis: Efficiency of transplantation and condition of regenerating bone marrow

Publication

Abstract

Hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) have the ability of both self-renewal and differentiation. After bone marrow damage, surviving host HSCs or transplanted donor HSCs are able to restore hematopoiesis and maintain it for a long time due to the selfrenewal potential.

HSCs reside in a specific microenvironment in the bone marrow, in stem cell niche, which supports their survival and controls their functioning. In this study, we investigated the impact of bone marrow damage induced by increasing doses of irradiation on engraftment efficiency of transplanted donor repopulating cells.

Using the CD45.1/CD45.2 congenic mouse model, we developed a new approach enabling estimation of surviving HSCs in damaged hematopoietic tissue. Its principle is in measuring of the donor chimerism resulting from transplantation of a defined dose of normal congenic bone marrow cells.

The transplanted donor cells contain repopulating cells, progenitors (STRCs) and HSCs (LTRCs) that give rise to blood cell production which proceeds in parallel with that present in the host hematopoietic tissue. We applied this approach to monitor spontaneous regeneration of repopulating cells, including HSCs, in mice irradiated with a sublethal dose of 6 Gy or by a lethal dose of 9 Gy and rescued by syngenic bone marrow cells.

This was accompanied by functional assays testing the transplantability of regenerating bone marrow cells, recovery of productive hematopoiesis, and analysis of the Linlowc-kit+Sca- 1+ (LSK) population of the bone marrow which is highly enriched in progenitors and HSCs. LSK cells were further analyzed according to CD150 and CD48 markers.