Anti-leukemic therapies induce cytogenetic changes of human bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells
- نوع فایل : کتاب
- زبان : انگلیسی
- مؤلف : Su-Peng Yeh &Wen-Jyi Lo & Chiao-Lin Lin & Yu-Min Liao & Chen-Yuan Lin & Li-Yuan Bai & Ji-An Liang & Chang-Fang Chiu
- چاپ و سال / کشور: 2011
Description
Both bone marrow hematopoietic cells (BM-HCs) and mesenchymal stem cells (BM-MSCs) may have cytogenetic aberrations in leukemic patients, and anti-leukemic therapy may induce cytogenetic remission of BM-HCs. The impact of anti-leukemic therapy on BM-MSCs remains unknown. Cytogenetic studies of BM-MSCs from 15 leukemic patients with documented cytogenetic abnormalities of BM-HCs were investigated. To see the influence of antileukemic therapy on BM-MSCs, cytogenetic studies were carried out in seven of them after the completion of antileukemic therapy, including anthracycline/Ara-C-based chemotherapy in two patients, high-dose busulfan/cyclophosphamide- based allogeneic transplantation in two patients, and total body irradiation (TBI)-based allogeneic transplantation in three patients. To simulate the effect of TBI in vitro, three BM-MSCs from one leukemic patient and two normal adults were irradiated using the same dosage and dosing schedule of TBI and cytogenetics were re-examined after irradiation. At the diagnosis of leukemia, two BM-MSCs had cytogenetic aberration, which were completely different to their BM-HCs counterpart. After the completion of antileukemic therapy, cytogenetic aberration was no longer detectable in one patient. Unexpectedly, BM-MSCs from three patients receiving TBI-based allogeneic transplantation acquired new, clonal cytogenetic abnormalities after transplantation. Similarly, complex cytogenetic abnormalities were found in all the three BM-MSCs exposed to in vitro irradiation. In conclusion, anti-leukemic treatments induce not only “cytogenetic remission” but also new cytogenetic abnormalities of BM-MSCs. TBI especially exerts detrimental effect on the chromosomal integrity of BM-MSCs and highlights the equal importance of investigating long-term adverse effect of anti-leukemic therapy on BM-MSCs as opposed to beneficial effect on BM-HCs.
Ann Hematol DOI 10.1007/s00277-011-1254-8 Received: 18 March 2011 / Accepted: 3 May 2011