| Literature DB >> 15498858 |
Christine Couldrey1, Heath L Bradley, Kevin D Bunting.
Abstract
Homologous disruption of expression of signal transducer and activator of transcription 5a (STAT5a) and STAT5b (STAT5ab(-/-)) in mice results in hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) that can engraft irradiated hosts alone but are noncompetitive against wild-type HSCs. To explore mechanisms for this phenotype, we crossed the STAT5 mutations onto an HW80 background congenic to the original C57BL/6 that differs in a small chromosome 7 genomic locus. We previously demonstrated that C57BL/6 or HW80 background STAT5ab(-/-) bone marrow (BM) cells showed equal repopulating function either competitively or noncompetitively in irradiated hosts. However, one intraperitoneal injection of wild-type green fluorescent protein (GFP) transgenic BM cells into unconditioned newborn STAT5ab(-/-) recipients of either background was sufficient for high-level donor engraftment. Furthermore, haploinsufficiency of STAT5 (STAT5ab(+/-)) allowed improved engraftment over wild-type recipients, indicating a dose-dependent requirement for STAT5 activation. In reciprocal experiments, STAT5ab(-/-) BM was transplanted into nonirradiated W/W(v) hosts. In these mice, C57BL/6 STAT5ab(-/-) BM cells were 10-fold more defective in long-term engraftment than control wild-type BM cells and HW80 STAT5ab(-/-) BM cells were 5- to 10-fold more defective than C57BL/6 STAT5ab(-/-) BM cells. Therefore, we conclude that STAT5 plays a critical role during steady-state HSC engraftment and a chromosome 7 modifier locus regulates this activity.Entities:
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Year: 2004 PMID: 15498858 DOI: 10.1182/blood-2004-06-2302
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Blood ISSN: 0006-4971 Impact factor: 22.113