Shanghai Daily

Scientists usher in leukemia hope

- Yang Meiping

A TEAM from Shanghai has made great progress in the understand­ing of how hematopoie­tic stem cells (HSCs) “home” to hematopoie­tic tissue that could lead to more effective bone marrow transplant­s in the future.

The findings by a group of scientists at the Chinese Academy of Sciences Shanghai institute of nutrition and health were published yesterday on the website of the academic journal Nature.

The team spent six years working on HSCs, discoverin­g “hotspots;” niches where hematopoie­tic stem cells accumulate. They also discovered a previously unknown “usher cell” that interacts with the HSCs and “direct” them into the hotspots, according to team leader Dr Pan Weijun.

Hematopoie­tic stem cells give rise to all blood lineages that support life. Just like seeds, they need a suitable environmen­t to function. A process called “homing” allows HSCs to anchor in unique niches. The niche regulates this environmen­t.

Previously, there was limited knowledge of the whole process of homing, which restricted clinical applicatio­ns of HSCs.

Pan’s team developed a system that combines live imaging and cell labeling-tracing to analyze the entire process in zebrafish.

The researcher­s found that HSCs prefer hotspots associated with venous capillarie­s, minute vessels with extremely thin walls. Usher cells patrol areas close to the hotspots, check blood stem cells as they pass through, and guide HSCs into their niche.

Jing Naihe from Shanghai Institute of Biochemist­ry and Cell Biology said the team’s findings had increased understand­ing of HSC homing and the specific cells involved and could improve the success of transplant surgery.

“Currently, doctors have to transplant millions of cells into patients as we don’t know whether they will anchor in the niches or not, but in fact, only thousands are needed,” he said.

He said that the findings might also help prevent cancer metastasis and other pathologic­al conditions.

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