Literature DB >> 19052546

Live-animal tracking of individual haematopoietic stem/progenitor cells in their niche.

Cristina Lo Celso1, Heather E Fleming, Juwell W Wu, Cher X Zhao, Sam Miake-Lye, Joji Fujisaki, Daniel Côté, David W Rowe, Charles P Lin, David T Scadden.   

Abstract

Stem cells reside in a specialized, regulatory environment termed the niche that dictates how they generate, maintain and repair tissues. We have previously documented that transplanted haematopoietic stem and progenitor cell populations localize to subdomains of bone-marrow microvessels where the chemokine CXCL12 is particularly abundant. Using a combination of high-resolution confocal microscopy and two-photon video imaging of individual haematopoietic cells in the calvarium bone marrow of living mice over time, we examine the relationship of haematopoietic stem and progenitor cells to blood vessels, osteoblasts and endosteal surface as they home and engraft in irradiated and c-Kit-receptor-deficient recipient mice. Osteoblasts were enmeshed in microvessels and relative positioning of stem/progenitor cells within this complex tissue was nonrandom and dynamic. Both cell autonomous and non-autonomous factors influenced primitive cell localization. Different haematopoietic cell subsets localized to distinct locations according to the stage of differentiation. When physiological challenges drove either engraftment or expansion, bone-marrow stem/progenitor cells assumed positions in close proximity to bone and osteoblasts. Our analysis permits observing in real time, at a single cell level, processes that previously have been studied only by their long-term outcome at the organismal level.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 19052546      PMCID: PMC2820276          DOI: 10.1038/nature07434

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nature        ISSN: 0028-0836            Impact factor:   49.962


  29 in total

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Authors:  Gregor B Adams; Karissa T Chabner; Ian R Alley; Douglas P Olson; Zbigniew M Szczepiorkowski; Mark C Poznansky; Claudine H Kos; Martin R Pollak; Edward M Brown; David T Scadden
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2005-12-28       Impact factor: 49.962

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Review 10.  Viewing transplantation immunology through today's lens: new models, new imaging, and new insights.

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