Anderson Joseph S, Bandi Sriram, Kaufman Dan S, Akkina Ramesh
Department of Microbiology, Immunology and Pathology, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado 80523, USA.
Retrovirology. 2006 Apr 19;3:24. doi: 10.1186/1742-4690-3-24.
Many novel studies and therapies are possible with the use of human embryonic stem cells (hES cells) and their differentiated cell progeny. The hES cell derived CD34 hematopoietic stem cells can be potentially used for many gene therapy applications. Here we evaluated the capacity of hES cell derived CD34 cells to give rise to normal macrophages as a first step towards using these cells in viral infection studies and in developing novel stem cell based gene therapy strategies for AIDS.
Undifferentiated normal and lentiviral vector transduced hES cells were cultured on S17 mouse bone marrow stromal cell layers to derive CD34 hematopoietic progenitor cells. The differentiated CD34 cells isolated from cystic bodies were further cultured in cytokine media to derive macrophages. Phenotypic and functional analyses were carried out to compare these with that of fetal liver CD34 cell derived macrophages. As assessed by FACS analysis, the hES-CD34 cell derived macrophages displayed characteristic cell surface markers CD14, CD4, CCR5, CXCR4, and HLA-DR suggesting a normal phenotype. Tests evaluating phagocytosis, upregulation of the costimulatory molecule B7.1, and cytokine secretion in response to LPS stimulation showed that these macrophages are also functionally normal. When infected with HIV-1, the differentiated macrophages supported productive viral infection. Lentiviral vector transduced hES cells expressing the transgene GFP were evaluated similarly like above. The transgenic hES cells also gave rise to macrophages with normal phenotypic and functional characteristics indicating no vector mediated adverse effects during differentiation.
Phenotypically normal and functionally competent macrophages could be derived from hES-CD34 cells. Since these cells are susceptible to HIV-1 infection, they provide a uniform source of macrophages for viral infection studies. Based on these results, it is also now feasible to transduce hES-CD34 cells with anti-HIV genes such as inhibitory siRNAs and test their antiviral efficacy in down stream differentiated cells such as macrophages which are among the primary cells that need to be protected against HIV-1 infection. Thus, the potential utility of hES derived CD34 hematopoietic cells for HIV-1 gene therapy can be evaluated.
利用人类胚胎干细胞(hES细胞)及其分化的细胞后代可以开展许多新的研究和治疗方法。hES细胞来源的CD34造血干细胞有可能用于多种基因治疗应用。在此,我们评估了hES细胞来源的CD34细胞产生正常巨噬细胞的能力,这是将这些细胞用于病毒感染研究以及开发针对艾滋病的新型基于干细胞的基因治疗策略的第一步。
将未分化的正常和慢病毒载体转导的hES细胞在S17小鼠骨髓基质细胞层上培养,以获得CD34造血祖细胞。从囊状体中分离出的分化CD34细胞在细胞因子培养基中进一步培养以获得巨噬细胞。进行了表型和功能分析,并将其与胎儿肝脏CD34细胞来源的巨噬细胞进行比较。通过流式细胞术分析评估,hES-CD34细胞来源的巨噬细胞显示出特征性的细胞表面标志物CD14、CD4、CCR5、CXCR4和HLA-DR,表明其具有正常表型。评估吞噬作用、共刺激分子B7.1上调以及对LPS刺激的细胞因子分泌的测试表明,这些巨噬细胞在功能上也是正常的。当用HIV-1感染时,分化的巨噬细胞支持病毒的有效感染。对表达转基因GFP的慢病毒载体转导的hES细胞进行了类似上述的评估。转基因hES细胞也产生了具有正常表型和功能特征的巨噬细胞,表明在分化过程中没有载体介导的不良影响。
表型正常且功能正常的巨噬细胞可以从hES-CD34细胞中获得。由于这些细胞易受HIV-1感染,它们为病毒感染研究提供了一致的巨噬细胞来源。基于这些结果,用抗HIV基因(如抑制性小干扰RNA)转导hES-CD34细胞并在下游分化细胞(如巨噬细胞,它们是需要防止HIV-1感染的主要细胞之一)中测试其抗病毒功效现在也是可行的。因此,可以评估hES来源的CD34造血细胞在HIV-1基因治疗中的潜在效用。