The expanding family of bone marrow homing factors for hematopoietic stem cells: stromal derived factor 1 is not the only player in the game.
Ratajczak. Mariusz Z MZ; Kim. Chihwa C; Janowska-Wieczorek. Anna A; Ratajczak. Janina J
Key Findings
- SDF‑1/CXCR4 is not the sole driver of hematopoietic stem cell homing to bone marrow.
- Bioactive lipids (S1P, C1P) and extracellular nucleotides (UTP, ATP) can direct stem cell migration.
- Innate immune components, including the antimicrobial peptide LL‑37, boost the response to SDF‑1 and are up‑regulated after marrow conditioning.
Practical Outcomes
- For most self‑experimenters, the findings are mainly of scientific interest and don’t translate into a ready‑to‑use protocol. They suggest that future stem‑cell‑based therapies might be enhanced by combining SDF‑1 with LL‑37 or related molecules, but more research is needed before any safe, DIY application.
Summary
The study shows that getting blood stem cells to the bone marrow isn’t just about one signal (SDF‑1). Other molecules like certain lipids, ATP, and immune peptides such as LL‑37 also help guide these cells, especially after the marrow has been pre‑treated for a transplant.
Abstract
The α-chemokine stromal derived factor 1 (SDF-1), which binds to the CXCR4 and CXCR7 receptors, directs migration and homing of CXCR4+ hematopoietic stem/progenitor cells (HSPCs) to bone marrow (BM) and plays a crucial role in retention of these cells in stem cell niches. However, this unique role of SDF-1 has been recently challenged by several observations supporting SDF-1-CXCR4-independent BM homing. Specifically, it has been demonstrated that HSPCs respond robustly to some bioactive lipids, such as sphingosine-1-phosphate (S1P) and ceramide-1-phosphate (C1P), and migrate in response to gradients of certain extracellular nucleotides, including uridine triphosphate (UTP) and adenosine triphosphate (ATP). Moreover, the responsiveness of HSPCs to an SDF-1 gradient is enhanced by some elements of innate immunity (e.g., C3 complement cascade cleavage fragments and antimicrobial cationic peptides, such as cathelicidin/LL-37 or β2-defensin) as well as prostaglandin E2 (PGE2). Since all these factors are upregulated in BM after myeloblative conditioning for transplantation, a more complex picture of homing emerges that involves several factors supporting, and in some situations even replacing, the SDF-1-CXCR4 axis.
Study Information
pubmed
2012
2012-06-04T00:00:00.000Z
10.1100/2012/758512
38
107