Skip to content
SearchContact UsDirectionsHome
Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research
About WhiteheadFaculty and ResearchResearch NewsPublic ProgramsCareer OpportunitiesSupport Whitehead
Research News
Search News Archives

On Topic

Paradigm Magazine

Discovery Newsletter

Fact Sheets

Video Gallery

Podcast

For the News Media

whitehead home > research news > search news archives > 2008 news stories > human blood stem cells are multiplied 20-fold in culture

Human blood stem cells are multiplied 20-fold in culture

CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (January 17, 2008) – Patients with leukemia, certain autoimmune diseases and genetic defects such as sickle-cell anemia can be treated with blood stem cells either from a donor’s bone marrow or from cord blood–but the supply of effective stem cells often runs short.

Now, researchers in the lab of Whitehead Member Harvey Lodish have found a way to multiply in culture adult hematopoietic (blood- forming) stem cells from human cord blood 20-fold, a major milestone that offers promise for bone marrow transplants and perhaps even gene therapy. Cord blood can be easily collected and stored as a frozen product, making it readily available.

"We’ve now identified five growth factors needed to stimulate human cord blood stem cells to divide in culture and make 20-fold as many stem cells," says Whitehead Member Harvey Lodish.

“Human cord blood is a rich source of stem cells, but offers too few of those cells to transplant into an adult,” says Lodish. “Previously we identified five growth factors that acting together in culture expanded mouse bone marrow hematopoietic stem cells 30-fold. Building on this research we’ve now identified five growth factors needed to stimulate human cord blood stem cells to divide in culture and make 20-fold as many stem cells.” The paper was pre-published online in Blood on January 17, 2008.

Two novel growth factors (angiopoietin-like 5 and IGFBP2) work in combination with three previously identified growth hormones (SCF (Stem Cell Factor), TPO (Thrombopoietin) and Flt3 ligand to stimulate the growth of these stem cells.

Known as hematopoietic stem cells, the cells give rise to oxygen-carrying red blood cells, white blood cells, and all of the cells that comprise the immune system. Previous efforts to grow human hematopoietic stem cells in culture have proven extraordinarily difficult because they rapidly differentiate into mature blood or immune cells.

“Our finding builds on previous work studying hematopoietic cells in which we discovered a novel cell population that when cultured in a dish with stem cells enabled them to multiply,” says Chengcheng Zhang, first author of the paper, formerly a postdoctoral researcher in the Lodish lab and now an assistant professor of physiology and developmental biology at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas. “We searched for genes that were active in these and other stem cell supportive cells, and identified genes that encoded growth factors. We then added the growth factors to the isolated hematopoietic stem cells and increased the number of stem cells in culture.”

To make sure that these were still viable stem cells, the researchers transplanted them into immune-deficient mice, and measured the resulting population of various sorts of human blood and immune system cells successfully growing in the mice.

The researchers note that this finding may also lead to advances in gene therapy, in which a genetic defect would be corrected by administering a healthy version of the gene into a patient. During gene therapy, hematopoietic stem cells from a patient would be isolated and exposed to a harmless virus that expresses a correct version of the mutated gene, and then the stem cells would be transferred back into the patient.

“If we could first culture stem cells such that they divide and make more stem cells before they are reintroduced into the patient, assays could be used to determine if the virus had landed in any undesirable places, in order to ensure that the healthy version of the gene is administered to the patient,” says Lodish. “With a technique such as this, it may be possible to ensure that the gene is inserted into the genome in the correct place.”

Written by Cristin Carr

****

Harvey Lodish's primary affiliation is with Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research, where his laboratory is located and all his research is conducted. He is also a professor of biology at Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

****

Full Citation:

Blood, pre-published online January 17, 2008

“Angiopoietin-like 5 and IGFBP2 stimulate ex vivo expansion of human cord blood hematopoietic stem cells as assayed by NOD/SCID transplantation”

Cheng Cheng Zhang (1,3,4), Megan Kaba (1), Satoru Iizuka (3), HoangDinh Huynh (3), and Harvey F Lodish (1,2,4)

1. Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research, Cambridge, MA 02142
2. Department of Biology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 77 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139
3. Departments of Physiology and Developmental Biology, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, 5323 Harry Hines Boulevard, Dallas, Texas 75390

Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research is a nonprofit, independent research and educational institution. Wholly independent in its governance, finances and research programs, Whitehead shares a close affiliation with Massachusetts Institute of Technology through its faculty, who hold joint MIT appointments.


Photo: Chengcheng Zhang is the first author of the paper.

Chengcheng Zhang is the first author of the paper.

Photo: Sam Ogden


Image of blood cells

Blood cells
This scanning electron microscope image shows normal human blood red blood cells (here with several
kinds of white blood cells).

Image by National Cancer Institute


CONTACT

Cristin Carr
Phone: 617-324-0460
Email: carr@wi.mit.edu

Whitehead Institute contact information