In Utero Transplantation of Expanded Autologous Amniotic Fluid Stem Cells Results in Long-Term Hematopoietic Engraftment.
Stavros P LoukogeorgakisPanicos ShangarisEnrica BertinChiara FranzinMartina PiccoliMichela PozzobonSindhu SubramaniamAlfonso TedeschiAimee G KimHaiying LiCamila G FachinAndre I B S DiasJohn D StratigisNicholas J AhnAdrian J ThrasherPaola BonfantiWilliam H PeranteauAnna L DavidAlan W FlakePaolo De CoppiPublished in: Stem cells (Dayton, Ohio) (2019)
In utero transplantation (IUT) of hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) has been proposed as a strategy for the prenatal treatment of congenital hematological diseases. However, levels of long-term hematopoietic engraftment achieved in experimental IUT to date are subtherapeutic, likely due to host fetal HSCs outcompeting their bone marrow (BM)-derived donor equivalents for space in the hematopoietic compartment. In the present study, we demonstrate that amniotic fluid stem cells (AFSCs; c-Kit+/Lin-) have hematopoietic characteristics and, thanks to their fetal origin, favorable proliferation kinetics in vitro and in vivo, which are maintained when the cells are expanded. IUT of autologous/congenic freshly isolated or cultured AFSCs resulted in stable multilineage hematopoietic engraftment, far higher to that achieved with BM-HSCs. Intravascular IUT of allogenic AFSCs was not successful as recently reported after intraperitoneal IUT. Herein, we demonstrated that this likely due to a failure of timely homing of donor cells to the host fetal thymus resulted in lack of tolerance induction and rejection. This study reveals that intravascular IUT leads to a remarkable hematopoietic engraftment of AFSCs in the setting of autologous/congenic IUT, and confirms the requirement for induction of central tolerance for allogenic IUT to be successful. Autologous, gene-engineered, and in vitro expanded AFSCs could be used as a stem cell/gene therapy platform for the in utero treatment of inherited disorders of hematopoiesis. Stem Cells 2019;37:1176-1188.
Keyphrases
- bone marrow
- stem cells
- cell therapy
- mesenchymal stem cells
- induced apoptosis
- gene therapy
- hematopoietic stem cell
- coronary artery
- signaling pathway
- umbilical cord
- pregnant women
- cell cycle arrest
- cell death
- cell proliferation
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- dna methylation
- transcription factor
- copy number
- smoking cessation
- genome wide identification