| Literature DB >> 30568919 |
Michael Medinger1,2, Beatrice Drexler2, Claudia Lengerke2, Jakob Passweg2.
Abstract
Aplastic anemia (AA) is characterized by bone marrow (BM) hypocellularity, resulting in peripheral cytopenias. An antigen-driven and likely auto-immune dysregulated T-cell homeostasis results in hematopoietic stem cell injury, which ultimately leads to the pathogenesis of the acquired form of this disease. Auto-immune and inflammatory processes further influence the disease course as well as response rate to therapy, mainly consisting of intensive immunosuppressive therapy and allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation. Bone marrow hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells are strongly regulated by the crosstalk with the surrounding microenvironment and its components like mesenchymal stromal cells, also consistently altered in AA. Whether latter is a contributing cause or rather consequence of the disease remains an open question. Overall, niche disruption may contribute to disease progression, sustain pancytopenia and promote clonal evolution. Here we review the existing knowledge on BM microenvironmental changes in acquired AA and discuss their relevance for the pathogenesis and therapy.Entities:
Keywords: aplastic anemia; mesenchymal stem cells; microenvironment; microvessel density; stem cell niche
Year: 2018 PMID: 30568919 PMCID: PMC6290278 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2018.00587
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Figure 1Possible mechanisms contributing to bone marrow niche modulation in aplastic anemia. Patients with aplastic anemia display not only low numbers of hematopoietic stem/progenitor cells (HSPC) but also an altered hematopoietic niche. This might result from immunologic attack and/or genetic defects impairing proliferation and survival in niche cells, or alternatively, from perturbed interactions of these with an unphysiologically diminished HSPC pool. Because of a quantitative MSC impairment in patients with acquired AA, it is tempting to speculate that bone marrow transplantations may yield better results compared to peripheral blood as stem cell source because they provide higher numbers of co-transplanted MSCs and supporting non-hematopoietic cell populations, which may promote niche reconstitution and thereby indirectly support nascent hematopoiesis in AA patients treated with allogeneic transplantations. allo-HCT, allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation; AA, aplastic anemia; BM, bone marrow; BMF, bone marrow failure; HSPC, hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells; MSC, mesenchymal stem cells; PB, peripheral blood; SDS, Shwachman-Diamond syndrome.
Figure 2Possible mechanisms contributing to bone marrow niche modulation and immune destruction of hematopoiesis in acquired aplastic anemia. Patients with acquired aplastic anemia (AA) display not only low numbers of hematopoietic stem cells (HSC) but also an altered hematopoietic niche. On the left side of the figure the effect of stromal cells (“stromal niche”) and its interaction with HSC and on the right side the effects of the immune cells on HSC (“hematopoietic niche”) are shown. Regarding the auto-immune pathophysiology in acquired AA, antigens are presented to naive CD8+ T cells by antigen presenting cells (APCs), which trigger T cells to activate and proliferate. Cytotoxic T cells (a polyclonal expansion of dysregulated CD4+ T-cells) triggering apoptosis in bone marrow (BM) cells. Further, activated T lymphocytes induce apoptosis in HSCs and oligoclonal expansion of dysregulated CD8+ T-cell populations. Besides that, there is abnormal production of cytokines including interferon-gamma (IFN-γ), tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF- α), and transforming growth factor (TGF) which induces HSC apoptosis through Fas and the Fas ligand. These events ultimately lead to reduced cell cycling and HSC cell death by apoptosis. Quantitative and qualitative deficits of regulatory T cells (Tregs), which normally suppress auto-reactivity of other T cell populations, further stimulates T cell expansion. TNF-α-producing macrophages (Mø) in the BM were more frequent in AA patients. Further, IFN-γ-mediated HSC loss was shown to require the presence of Mø. INF-γ increases BM Mø which drives loss of megakaryocytes and HSC. The potential for IFN-γ to both directly exhaust and deplete HSCs, as well as to indirectly reduce HSC function through microenvironmental niche cells, particularly Mø, and mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs), adds complexity to the study of AA pathogenesis. Possibly, B cells, which are increased in AA patients, produce auto-antibodies against HSC. Regarding the stromal niche, impairments in osteoblastic, vascular, and perivascular HSC niches might contribute to defective hematopoiesis in patients with AA. MSC function is impaired in AA, HSCs cannot adequately proliferate, and activated T-cells are not suppressed. MSC aberrant alteration impair the maintaining of the immune homeostasis. Adipocytes (AC) are increased and pericytes are decreased (PC) and suppress hematopoiesis. Further, the microvessel density (MVD) and vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) expression is decreased in AA. Given the close interaction and regulatory feedback loops between resident hematopoietic and niche cells, it is not surprising that besides immune destruction, AA also associates with defects in non-hematopoietic BM microenvironment components. AC, adipocytes; APC, antigen-presenting cell; HSC, hematopoietic stem cell; EC, endothelial cells; INF-γ, interferon-gamma; MVD, microvessel density; Mø, macrophages; MSC, mesenchymal stem cells; OB, osteoblasts; OC, osteoclasts; PC, pericytes; TNF-α, tumor necrosis factor-alpha; VEGF, vascular endothelial growth factor.
Selection of relevant studies about bone marrow microenvironment in aplastic anemia.
| Mice | Role of macrophages in AA |
- Depleting macrophages or abrogating IFN-γ signaling in macrophages did not impair T-cell activation or IFN-γ production in the BM but rescued HSCs - Macrophages are not required for induction of IFN-γ in SAA and rather act as sensors of IFN-γ - Macrophage depletion rescued thrombocytopenia, increased BM megakaryocytes, preserved platelet-primed stem cells, and increased the platelet-repopulating capacity of transplanted HSCs | ( |
| Mice, human | TNF-α from host macrophages and TNF-αR expressed on donor T cells are critical in the pathogenesis of murine immune-mediated BM failure - AA patients have higher frequencies of TNF-α-producing CD16+CD68+ macrophages in the BM than do healthy donors |
- Infusion of TNF-α−/− donor LN cells into CByB6F1 recipients mice or injection of FVB LN cells into TNF-αR−/− recipients both induced BM failure, with marked increases in plasma IFN-γ and TNF-α levels - In TNF-α−/− recipients, BM damage was attenuated, suggesting that TNF-α of host origin was essential for immune destruction of hematopoiesis - Depletion of host macrophages before LN injection reduced T-cell IFN-γ levels and reduced BM damage, while injection of recombinant TNF-α into FVB-LN cell-infused TNF-α−/− recipients increased T-cell IFN-γ expression and accelerated BM damage - Infusion of TNF-αR−/− donor LN cells into CByB6F1 recipients reduced BM T-cell infiltration, suppressed T-cell IFN-γ production, and alleviated BM destruction - In AA patients, TNF-α-producing macrophages in the BM were more frequent than in healthy donors | ( |
| Mice | ROS generation is associated with BM failure in AA |
- Increased ROS and disruption of hematopoietic niche under aplastic stress - Decline of stromal components and deregulation of Notch-1/ Jagged-1 signaling axis in aplastic marrow - Altered DNA methylation and H-3 phosphorylation status associated with redox imbalance in aplastic marrow | ( |
| Human | VEGF-Notch signaling pathway |
- Lower expression of VEGF, VEGFR, Notch-1, Jagged1, Delta-like1, and hes1 was revealed in AA BM tissues and AA MSCs - The intervention of DAPT (a γ-secretase inhibitor) significantly inhibited proliferation, and promoted the apoptosis and adipogenic differentiation of AA MSCs, while VEGF intervention exhibited opposite results - The proliferation, migration, and angiogenesis of HUVECs were significantly promoted by normal BM-MSCs, while inhibited by VEGF/Notch-1 shRNA transfected BM-MSCs | ( |
| Human, mice | Effect of CD106 and NF-κB in BM failure of AA |
- BM-MSCs from AA patients exhibited downregulation of the CD106 gene (VCAM1) and low expression of CD106 - CD106+ MSCs from both AA patients and healthy controls had increased potential for - CD106+ MSCs from both AA patients and healthy controls more strongly supported - Expression of NF-κB was decreased in AA MSCs, and NF-κB regulated the CD106 gene (VCAM1) which supported hematopoiesis | ( |
| Human | Vascular and perivascular niches are numerically restored, but the endosteal niche remains numerically impaired in patients with AA after allo-HCT |
- Levels of VEGF, but not donor-derived BM-MSCs, may correlate with the restoration of BM niches | ( |
| Human | AA is associated with impaired hematopoietic stem cell niches |
- Patients with AA showed markedly fewer endosteal cells, vascular cells, and perivascular cells compared with controls | ( |
| Human | The biological characteristics of AA MSC are different from those of control MSC and their |
- AA MSC presented typical morphology and distinctive mesenchymal markers, stromal formation was reduced, with 50% of BM samples failing to produce adherent layers - Their proliferative and clonogenic capacity was markedly decreased and the ability to sustain haemopoiesis was significantly reduced, as assessed by total cell proliferation and clonogenic potential of HSC | ( |
| Human, mice | BM-MSCs from patients with AA do not have impaired functional and immunological properties, suggesting that they do not contribute to the pathogenesis of the disease |
- MSCs cultures can be established from the BM of AA patients and display the same phenotype and differentiation potential as their counterparts from normal BM - MSCs from AA patients support the | ( |
| Human | Gene expression profile of BM-MSCs confirmed the abnormal biological properties and provided significant evidence for the possible mechanism of the destruction of the BM microenvironment in AA |
- BM-MSCs from AA patients showed aberrant morphology, decreased proliferation and clonogenic potential and increased apoptosis compared to controls - BM-MSCs from AA patients were susceptible to be induced to differentiate into adipocytes but more difficult to differentiate into osteoblasts - A large number of genes implicated in cell cycle, cell division, proliferation, chemotaxis and hematopoietic cell lineage showed markedly decreased expression in BM-MSCs from AA patients - Conversely, more related genes with apoptosis, adipogenesis and immune response showed increased expression in BM-MSCs from AA patients | ( |
AA, aplastic anemia; allo-HCT, allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation; BM, bone marrow; BM-MSCs, bone marrow mesenchymal stem cells; HSCs, hematopoietic stem cells; HUVECs, human umbilical vein endothelial cells; IFN-γ, interferon-gamma; LN, lymph node; MSC, mesenchymal stem cells; ROS, reactive oxygen species; SAA, severe aplastic anemia; shRNA, short hairpin RNA; TNF-α, tumor necrosis factor-alpha; VEGF, vascular endothelial growth factor; VEGFR, vascular endothelial growth factor receptor.