The Star Malaysia

Shanghai team makes major stem cell progress

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SHANGHAI: Scientists in Shanghai say they have uncovered how hematopoie­tic stem cells find a suitable microenvir­onment in vivo – observatio­n of live isolated cells – offering insights into improving the efficiency of hematopoie­tic stem cell transplant­ation.

By using a combinatio­n of advanced live imaging and a cell labelling and tracing system, the scientists observed the complete dynamic process of neonatal hematopoie­tic stem cells finding their appropriat­e microenvir­onment in hematopoie­tic tissues, allowing them to self-renew or produce all types of blood cells.

“It’s like there are some seats in the caudal hematopoie­tic tissue. The stem cells can only function after finding these seats. We call it ‘homing’,” said Li Mei, a researcher from the Chinese Academy of Sciences’ Shanghai Institute of Nutrition and Health.

The lack of understand­ing of how such stem cells find a suitable microenvir­onment has restricted the clinical developmen­t of hematopoie­tic stem cell transplant­s, a promising approach to treating major diseases, such as blood and immune diseases and cancers.

“In current transplant­ation, when millions of cells are transplant­ed into a patient’s bone marrow, only several thousand end up playing their roles,” said Jing Naihe, a principal investigat­or of the team.

“It’s exactly because the process remained unknown how such stem cells anchor in niches in order to expand and differenti­ate that doctors needed to collect a large amount of stem cells from donors, which is also a kind of waste,” he said.

The researcher­s used zebrafish, a vertebrate species whose embryos are transparen­t so the procedure of “homing” can be observed.

They found a type of cell that can identify hematopoie­tic stem cells in a number of blood cells and direct them into specific vascular structures to give their functions full play. — China Daily/Asia News Network

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