4.7 Article

Mesenchymal stem cells suppress leukemia via macrophage-mediated functional restoration of bone marrow microenvironment

Journal

LEUKEMIA
Volume 34, Issue 9, Pages 2375-2383

Publisher

SPRINGERNATURE
DOI: 10.1038/s41375-020-0775-3

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Key R&D Program of China [2019YFA0110200]
  2. Strategic Priority Research Program of Chinese Academy of Sciences [XDA16010601]
  3. Chinese Ministry of Science and Technology [2015CB964401, 2016YFA0100601, 2016YFA0100600, 2017YFA0103401, 2015CB964902]
  4. Major Research and Development Project of Guangzhou Regenerative Medicine and Health Guangdong Laboratory [2018GZR110104006, 2018GZR0201008]
  5. CAS Key Research Program of Frontier Sciences [QYZDB-SSW-SMC057]
  6. Health and Medical Care Collaborative Innovation Program of Guangzhou Scientific and Technology [201803040017]
  7. CAMS Innovation Fund for Medical Sciences [2016-12M-1-002]
  8. Guangzhou Scientific and Technological Project [201707010157]
  9. Science and Technology Planning Project of Guangdong Province [2017B030314056, 2017B020230004]
  10. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81925002, 81970099, 31471117, 31271457, 81470281, 81421002, 81730006, 31600948, 81861148029]
  11. CAMS Initiative for Innovative Medicine [2016-I2M-1-017]
  12. NIH, USA [AI079087, HL130724]

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Bone marrow (BM) mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) are critical components of the BM microenvironment and play an essential role in supporting hematopoiesis. Dysfunction of MSCs is associated with the impaired BM microenvironment that promotes leukemia development. However, whether and how restoration of the impaired BM microenvironment can inhibit leukemia development remain unknown. Using an established leukemia model and the RNA-Seq analysis, we discovered functional degeneration of MSCs during leukemia progression. Importantly, intra-BM instead of systemic transfusion of donor healthy MSCs restored the BM microenvironment, demonstrated by functional recovery of host MSCs, improvement of thrombopoiesis, and rebalance of myelopoiesis. Consequently, intra-BM MSC treatment reduced tumor burden and prolonged survival of the leukemia-bearing mice. Mechanistically, donor MSC treatment restored the function of host MSCs and reprogrammed host macrophages into arginase 1 positive phenotype with tissue-repair features. Transfusion of MSC-reprogrammed macrophages largely recapitulated the therapeutic effects of MSCs. Taken together, our study reveals that donor MSCs reprogram host macrophages to restore the BM microenvironment and inhibit leukemia development.

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