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Human acute myelogenous leukemia stem cells are rare and heterogeneous when assayed in NOD/SCID/IL2Rγc-deficient mice
Jean-Emmanuel Sarry, … , G. Danet-Desnoyers, Martin Carroll
Jean-Emmanuel Sarry, … , G. Danet-Desnoyers, Martin Carroll
Published December 13, 2010
Citation Information: J Clin Invest. 2011;121(1):384-395. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI41495.
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Research Article Hematology

Human acute myelogenous leukemia stem cells are rare and heterogeneous when assayed in NOD/SCID/IL2Rγc-deficient mice

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Abstract

Human leukemic stem cells, like other cancer stem cells, are hypothesized to be rare, capable of incomplete differentiation, and restricted to a phenotype associated with early hematopoietic progenitors or stem cells. However, recent work in other types of tumors has challenged the cancer stem cell model. Using a robust model of xenotransplantation based on NOD/SCID/IL2Rγc-deficient mice, we confirmed that human leukemic stem cells, functionally defined by us as SCID leukemia-initiating cells (SL-ICs), are rare in acute myelogenous leukemia (AML). In contrast to previous results, SL-ICs were found among cells expressing lineage markers (i.e., among Lin+ cells), CD38, or CD45RA, all markers associated with normal committed progenitors. Remarkably, each engrafting fraction consistently recapitulated the original phenotypic diversity of the primary AML specimen and contained self-renewing leukemic stem cells, as demonstrated by secondary transplants. While SL-ICs were enriched in the Lin–CD38– fraction compared with the other fractions analyzed, SL-ICs in this fraction represented only one-third of all SL-ICs present in the unfractionated specimen. These results indicate that human AML stem cells are rare and enriched but not restricted to the phenotype associated with normal primitive hematopoietic cells. These results suggest a plasticity of the cancer stem cell phenotype that we believe has not been previously described.

Authors

Jean-Emmanuel Sarry, Kathleen Murphy, Robin Perry, Patricia V. Sanchez, Anthony Secreto, Cathy Keefer, Cezary R. Swider, Anne-Claire Strzelecki, Cindy Cavelier, Christian Récher, Véronique Mansat-De Mas, Eric Delabesse, G. Danet-Desnoyers, Martin Carroll

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Figure 3

SL-IC do not necessarily express CD34.

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SL-IC do not necessarily express CD34.
Engraftment level of human AML ce...
Engraftment level of human AML cells in BM of NSG mice 12 weeks after transplantation of CD34– and CD34+ subsets sorted from 6 primary AML patient samples expressing (A) CD34 or (B) not. Black diamonds show the engraftment level in each individual mouse, injected with 0.1 to 1.0 million sorted human cells.

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