| Literature DB >> 25017720 |
Kadriye Nehir Cosgun1, Susann Rahmig1, Nicole Mende1, Sören Reinke1, Ilona Hauber2, Carola Schäfer2, Anke Petzold3, Henry Weisbach1, Gordon Heidkamp4, Ariawan Purbojo5, Robert Cesnjevar5, Alexander Platz6, Martin Bornhäuser7, Marc Schmitz3, Diana Dudziak4, Joachim Hauber2, Jörg Kirberg8, Claudia Waskow9.
Abstract
In-depth analysis of the cellular and molecular mechanisms regulating human HSC function will require a surrogate host that supports robust maintenance of transplanted human HSCs in vivo, but the currently available options are problematic. Previously we showed that mutations in the Kit receptor enhance engraftment of transplanted HSCs in the mouse. To generate an improved model for human HSC transplantation and analysis, we developed immune-deficient mouse strains containing Kit mutations. We found that mutation of the Kit receptor enables robust, uniform, sustained, and serially transplantable engraftment of human HSCs in adult mice without a requirement for irradiation conditioning. Using this model, we also showed that differential KIT expression identifies two functionally distinct subpopulations of human HSCs. Thus, we have found that the capacity of this Kit mutation to open up stem cell niches across species barriers has significant potential and broad applicability in human HSC research.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25017720 DOI: 10.1016/j.stem.2014.06.001
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Stem Cell ISSN: 1875-9777 Impact factor: 24.633