| Literature DB >> 26163797 |
Bernhard Gentner1, Nicole Pochert2, Arefeh Rouhi2, Francesco Boccalatte1, Tiziana Plati1, Tobias Berg3, Su Ming Sun4, Sarah M Mah5, Milijana Mirkovic-Hösle6, Jens Ruschmann5, Andrew Muranyi7, Simon Leierseder8, Bob Argiropoulos9, Daniel T Starczynowski10, Aly Karsan11, Michael Heuser12, Donna Hogge3, Fernando D Camargo13, Stefan Engelhardt8, Hartmut Döhner2, Christian Buske7, Mojca Jongen-Lavrencic4, Luigi Naldini1, R Keith Humphries5, Florian Kuchenbauer14.
Abstract
A precise understanding of the role of miR-223 in human hematopoiesis and in the pathogenesis of acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is still lacking. By measuring miR-223 expression in blasts from 115 AML patients, we found significantly higher miR-223 levels in patients with favorable prognosis, whereas patients with low miR-223 expression levels were associated with worse outcome. Furthermore, miR-223 was hierarchically expressed in AML subpopulations, with lower expression in leukemic stem cell-containing fractions. Genetic depletion of miR-223 decreased the leukemia initiating cell (LIC) frequency in a myelomonocytic AML mouse model, but it was not mandatory for rapid-onset AML. To relate these observations to physiologic myeloid differentiation, we knocked down or ectopically expressed miR-223 in cord-blood CD34⁺ cells using lentiviral vectors. Although miR-223 knockdown delayed myeloerythroid precursor differentiation in vitro, it increased myeloid progenitors in vivo following serial xenotransplantation. Ectopic miR-223 expression increased erythropoiesis, T lymphopoiesis, and early B lymphopoiesis in vivo. These findings broaden the role of miR-223 as a regulator of the expansion/differentiation equilibrium in hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells where its impact is dose- and differentiation-stage-dependent. This also explains the complex yet minor role of miR-223 in AML, a heterogeneous disease with variable degree of myeloid differentiation.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26163797 PMCID: PMC4860732 DOI: 10.1016/j.exphem.2015.05.018
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Exp Hematol ISSN: 0301-472X Impact factor: 3.084