
January
27, 2006 |
Study
identifies molecule essential for proper localization of blood stem cells
Scientists at the MGH Center for Regenerative Medicine (CRM) have defined
a molecule that dictates how blood stem cells travel to the bone marrow
and establish blood and immune cell production. The discovery in an animal
model may help improve bone marrow transplantation and the treatment of
several blood disorders.
"This is another remarkable example of how bone and bone marrow interact.
A receptor known to participate in the body's regulation of calcium and
bone also is critical for stem cells to engraft in the bone marrow and
regenerate blood and immune cells," says David Scadden, MD, director
of the MGH-CRM. "It reminds us how looking closely at where stem
cells reside may tell us a lot about how to manipulate them," Scadden
is senior author of the report, which will be published in the journal
Nature and is available online.
Hematopoietic or blood stem cells are critical to the daily production
of more than 10 billion blood cells and are the basis for bone marrow
transplant therapy for cancer. These cells are extremely powerful at regenerating
blood and immune cells, but only if they travel to the proper location
when introduced into the body, a process that depends on largely unknown
molecules. Investigating evidence that suggested fundamental interactions
between the processes of bone formation and stem cell development, the
researchers found that a molecule called the calcium-sensing receptor
appears to direct stem cells to the marrow via its interaction with the
bone protein collagen I.
"Since there already are drugs available that target this receptor,
we may be able to quickly adapt these findings in animals to the treatment
of human patients," says Scadden. MGH co-authors of the study are
Gregor Adams, PhD; Karissa Chabner; Ian Alley; Douglas Olson; Zbigniew
Szczpiorkowski, MD; and Mark Poznansky, MD, PhD — all of the CRM.
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