1. An irradiated marrow niche reveals a small noncollagenous protein mediator of homing, dermatopontin.
- Author
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Kramer AC, Astuti Y, Elfstrum A, Lehrke MJ, Tolar J, Blazar BR, Blake AL, Taisto ME, Furcich JW, Nolan EE, Durose WW, Webber BR, Geisness A, Wood DK, and Lund TC
- Subjects
- Animals, Cell Adhesion, Hematopoietic Stem Cells, Mice, Zebrafish, Bone Marrow, Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation
- Abstract
Hematopoietic cell homing after hematopoietic cell transplant (HCT) is governed by several pathways involving marrow niche cells that are evoked after pre-HCT conditioning. To understand the factors that play a role in homing, we performed expression analysis on zebrafish marrow niche cells following conditioning. We determined that the noncollagenous protein extracellular matrix related protein dermatopontin (Dpt) was upregulated sevenfold in response to irradiation. Studies in mice revealed DPT induction with radiation and lipopolysaccharide exposure. Interestingly, we found that coincubation of zebrafish or murine hematopoietic cells with recombinant DPT impedes hematopoietic stem and progenitor cell homing by 50% and 86%, respectively. Similarly, this translated into a 24% reduction in long-term engraftment (vs control; P = .01). We found DPT to interact with VLA-4 and block hematopoietic cell-endothelial cell adhesion and transendothelial migration. Finally, a DPT-knockout mouse displayed a 60% increase in the homing of hematopoietic cells vs wild-type mice (P = .03) with a slight improvement in long-term lin-SCA1+cKIT+-SLAM cell engraftment (twofold; P = .04). These data show that the extracellular matrix-related protein DPT increases with radiation and transiently impedes the transendothelial migration of hematopoietic cells to the marrow., (© 2021 by The American Society of Hematology.)
- Published
- 2021
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