Myelodysplastic Syndromes (MDS) are clonal neoplasms where stem/progenitor cells endowed with self-renewal and capable of perpetuating the disease have been demonstrated. It is known that oxygen tension plays a key… Click to show full abstract
Myelodysplastic Syndromes (MDS) are clonal neoplasms where stem/progenitor cells endowed with self-renewal and capable of perpetuating the disease have been demonstrated. It is known that oxygen tension plays a key role in driving normal hematopoiesis and that hematopoietic stem cells are maintained in hypoxic areas of the bone marrow (BM). Hypoxia could also regulate leukemic/dysplastic hematopoiesis. We evaluated the stem cell potential of MDS cells derived from the BM of 39 MDS patients and selected under severe hypoxia. MDS cells rescued from hypoxia-incubated cultures were subjected to stem and progenitor cell assays in vitro, as well as to hematopoietic reconstitution assay in NOD-SCID mice. Incubation in severe hypoxia of cells explanted from MDS patients selected a cell subset endowed with stem cell potential, as determined in vitro. This occurred only from the BM of patients classified as IPSS low/INT-1 risk. Transplantation into NOD-SCID mice confirmed using an in vivo model that severe hypoxia selects a cell subset endowed with stem cell potential from bone marrow mononuclear cells (BMMC). derived from patients belonging to the IPSS low/int-1 risk group. Data here reported show that cells endowed with stem cell potential and capable of adapting to hypoxia and escaping hypoxia-induced apoptosis exist within MDS cell populations.
               
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