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Hematopoietic stem progenitor cells lacking HLA differ from those lacking GPI-anchored proteins in the hierarchical stage and sensitivity to immune attack in patients with acquired aplastic anemia.

Takeshi YoroidakaKohei HosokawaTatsuya ImiHiroki MizumakiTakamasa KatagiriKen IshiyamaHirohito YamazakiFumihiro AzumaYasuhito NanyaSeishi OgawaShinji Nakao
Published in: Leukemia (2021)
To characterize glycosylphosphatidylinositol-anchored protein-deficient (GPI[-]) and HLA-class I allele-lacking (HLA[-]) hematopoietic stem progenitor cells (HSPCs) in acquired aplastic anemia (AA), we studied the peripheral blood (PB) of 56 AA patients in remission who possessed both (n = 13, Group A) or either GPI(-) (n = 34, Group B) and HLA(-) (n = 9, Group C) cell populations. Seventy-seven percent (10/13) of Group A had HLA(-) cells in all lineages of PB cells, including platelets, while only 23% (3/13) had GPI(-) cells in all lineages, and the median percentage of HLA(-) granulocytes in the total granulocytes (21.2%) was significantly higher than that of GPI(-) granulocytes (0.28%, P < 0.05). The greater lineage diversity in HLA(-) cells than in GPI(-) cells was also seen when Group B and Group C were compared. Longitudinal studies of seven patients in Group A showed a gradual decrease in the percentage of HLA(-) granulocytes, with a reciprocal increase in the GPI(-) granulocytes in four patients responding to cyclosporine (CsA) and an increase in the HLA(-) granulocytes with a stable or declining GPI(-) granulocytes in three patients in sustained remission off CsA therapy. These findings suggest that HLA(-) HSPCs differ from GPI(-) HSPCs in the hierarchical stage and sensitivity to immune attack in AA.
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