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Showing papers by "Volker Eckstein published in 2015"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Functional analyses showed that ALDH+ cells from ALDH‐numerous AML were quiescent, refractory to ARA‐C treatment and capable of leukemic engraftment in a xenogenic mouse transplantation model providing an additional risk‐stratification tool.
Abstract: To understand the precise disease driving mechanisms in acute myeloid leukemia (AML), comparison of patient matched hematopoietic stem cells (HSC) and leukemia stem cells (LSC) is essential. In this analysis, we have examined the value of aldehyde dehydrogenase (ALDH) activity in combination with CD34 expression for the separation of HSC from LSC in 104 patients with de novo AML. The majority of AML patients (80 out of 104) had low percentages of cells with high ALDH activity (ALDH(+) cells; <1.9%; ALDH-rare AML), whereas 24 patients had relatively numerous ALDH(+) cells (≥1.9%; ALDH-numerous AML). In patients with ALDH-rare AML, normal HSC could be separated by their CD34(+) ALDH(+) phenotype, whereas LSC were exclusively detected among CD34(+) ALDH(-) cells. For patients with ALDH-numerous AML, the CD34(+) ALDH(+) subset consisted mainly of LSC and separation from HSC was not feasible. Functional analyses further showed that ALDH(+) cells from ALDH-numerous AML were quiescent, refractory to ARA-C treatment and capable of leukemic engraftment in a xenogenic mouse transplantation model. Clinically, resistance to chemotherapy and poor long-term outcome were also characteristic for patients with ALDH-numerous AML providing an additional risk-stratification tool. The difference in spectrum and relevance of ALDH activity in the putative LSC populations demonstrates, in addition to phenotypic and genetic, also functional heterogeneity of leukemic cells and suggests divergent roles for ALDH activity in normal HSC versus LSC. By acknowledging these differences our study provides a new and useful tool for prospective identification of AML cases in which separation of HSC from LSC is possible.

46 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that the binding of HSC to the niche model is a cooperative process, and the adhesion mediated by the CXCR4- SDF1α axis is stronger than that by homophilic N-cadherin binding.
Abstract: Using planar lipid membranes with precisely defined concentrations of specific ligands, we have determined the binding strength between human hematopoietic stem cells (HSC) and the bone marrow niche. The relative significance of HSC adhesion to the surrogate niche models via SDF1α-CXCR4 or N-cadherin axes was quantified by (a) the fraction of adherent cells, (b) the area of tight adhesion, and (c) the critical pressure for cell detachment. We have demonstrated that the binding of HSC to the niche model is a cooperative process, and the adhesion mediated by the CXCR4- SDF1α axis is stronger than that by homophilic N-cadherin binding. The statistical image analysis of stochastic morphological dynamics unraveled that HSC dissipated energy by undergoing oscillatory deformation. The combination of an in vitro niche model and novel physical tools has enabled us to quantitatively determine the relative significance of binding mechanisms between normal HSC versus leukemia blasts to the bone marrow niche.

33 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A reduced thymic output of RTE‐Tregs during pregnancy causes a decrease in the ratio of R TE‐/MN‐T Regs and thus an increase in the differentiation of RTFs towards CD45RA−CD31−‐memory Tregs, which ensures the improved suppressive activity of theCD45RA+‐naive Treg pool and thus retains the maintenance of pregnancy.
Abstract: During pregnancy, regulatory T cells (Tregs) have a key role in maternal immune tolerance to the semi-allogeneic fetus. Our previous results showed that the naive CD45RA(+)-Treg pool is functionally improved in pregnant women compared with non-pregnant women. Therefore, we examined the thymic output and differentiation of CD45RA(+)CD31(+) recent thymic emigrant (RTE)-Tregs during normal pregnancy and in the presence of preeclampsia. With the onset of pregnancy, the composition of the total CD4(+)CD127(low+/-)FoxP3(+)-Treg pool changed in the way that its percentage of RTE- and CD45RA(-)CD31(+)-memory Tregs decreased strongly, whereas that of the CD45RA(+)CD31(-)-mature naive (MN)-Tregs did not change and that of the CD45RA(-)CD31(-)-memory Tregs increased complementary. Thereby, the ratio of RTE-/MN-Tregs decreased from 1.0 to 0.7 leading to a significant increase in the suppressive activity of the naive CD45RA(+)-Treg pool. This effect was confirmed by re-assembling separated RTE- and MN-Tregs from non-pregnant women in the ratio of pregnant women. The suppressive activity of both separated naive Treg subsets was equally high in non-pregnant and pregnant women, but considerably reduced in preeclampsia patients, who showed significantly increased percentages of CD45RA(-)CD31(+)-memory Tregs, but decreased percentages of RTE- and MN-Tregs. Our results suggest a reduced thymic output of RTE-Tregs during pregnancy, which causes a decrease in the ratio of RTE-/MN-Tregs and thus an increase in the differentiation of RTE-Tregs towards CD45RA(-)CD31(-)-memory Tregs. Presumably, this differentiation of RTE-Tregs, which was impaired in preeclampsia patients, ensures the improved suppressive activity of the CD45RA(+)-naive Treg pool and thus retains the maintenance of pregnancy.

27 citations