百家乐怎么玩-澳门百家乐官网娱乐城网址_网上百家乐是不是真的_全讯网888 (中国)·官方网站

Title

Self-renewal of human hematopoietic progenitor cells: Development of novel therapies for anemias

Date:
13 November 2017
Speaker: Prof. Harvey F. Lodish

Abstract

Many acute and chronic anemias are not treatable with erythropoietin (Epo) because the terminal erythroid progenitors (colony-forming units erythroid; CFU-Es) that respond to Epo are too few in number to maintain sufficient red blood cell production. Treatment of these anemias requires a drug that acts at an earlier stage of red cell formation and enhances the formation of the Epo-sensitive CFU-E progenitors.

Self-renewal divisions are a fundamental property of stem cells and many types of progenitor cells, but the underlying molecular mechanisms regulating this type of cell division are not known. Several years ago we showed that glucocorticoids specifically stimulate self-renewal of the earlier erythroid progenitor, the burst-forming unit erythroid (BFU-E), and over time increase the production of CFU-Es and subsequently terminally differentiated red cells. Glucocorticoids have been used to treat Epo-resistant anemia but severe side effects limit their use.

Recently we demonstrated that activation of the peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor alpha (PPARα) by clinically tested PPARα agonists, used for dyslipidemia, synergizes with the glucocorticoid receptor to promote BFU-E self-renewal. Over time these agonists synergize to greatly increase production of both human and mouse red blood cells. In BFU-E progenitors PPARα co-occupies many chromatin sites with the glucocorticoid receptor and stimulates transcription of an overlapping set of genes, including at least one RNA-binding protein, that are essential for self-renewal divisions. Our discovery of the role of PPARα agonists in stimulating self-renewal of early erythroid progenitor cells suggests that the clinically tested PPARα agonists we used may improve the efficacy of corticosteroids in treating Epo resistant anemias.

“Early” BFU-E cells forming large BFU-E colonies presumably have higher capacities for self-renewal than do those forming small BFU-E colonies. In order to understand the mechanism underlying this heterogeneity, we conducted single cell transcriptome analysis on BFU-E cells purified from mouse embryos and cultured in vitro. Our analyses showed that there are two principal subgroups of mouse BFU-E cells and that expression of the Type III TGFβ receptor (TGFβ RIII) is markedly elevated in “late” relative to “early” BFU-Es. Expression of TGFβ RIII is correlated with that of GATA1, a gene encoding an erythroid transcription factor induced during the BFU-E to CFU-E transition. Both mouse and human BFU-E sub populations (TGFBR310%lo) expressing the 10% lowest amount of surface TGFβ RIII are indeed enriched for early BFU-Es, and are significantly more responsive to glucocorticoid stimulation, which promotes BFU-E self-renewal, as compared to the total BFU-E population. The TGFBR310%lo BFU-E subpopulation presumably represents earlier BFU-Es with maximal capacity for self-renewal. Consistent with this notion, signaling by the TGFβ receptor kinases RI and RII increases during the transition from early (TGFBR310%low) to late (TGFBR310%hi) BFU-Es and then decreases in CFU-E cells. Blocking TGFβ signaling by receptor kinase inhibitors currently in the clinic increases TGFBR310%lo BFU-E cell self-renewal and increases total erythroblast production, suggesting the use of this type of drug as well in treating EPO unresponsive anemias.

 

Speaker Bio

Prof. Harvey F. Lodish

Founding Member of the Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research
Professor of Biology and Professor of Biological Engineering
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Member of National Academy of Sciences

Professor Harvey F. Lodish is a Founding Member of the Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research and Professor of Biology and Professor of Biological Engineering at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

He is a Member of the National Academy of Sciences and a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Professor Lodish is a member of the Board of Trustees of Boston Children’s Hospital, where he is Chair of the Board of Trustees Research Committee. From 2008 to 2016 he was the Founding Chair of the Scientific Advisory Board of the Massachusetts Life Sciences Center, the group charged with oversight of the state’s 10- year $1 billion investment in the life sciences. He was a founder and scientific advisory board member of several companies including Genzyme, Inc., and Millennium Pharmaceuticals, Inc., and has served on the scientific advisory boards of numerous biopharmaceutical companies.

Professor Lodish is the lead author of the textbook Molecular Cell Biology. The eighth edition was published in April 2016; the book has been translated into 12 languages. During 2004 he served as President of the American Society for Cell Biology.

Video

Photos

gallery_made_with_nanogallery2
88娱乐城备用| 百家乐视频下载| 大佬百家乐娱乐城| 大渡口区| 网上百家乐网站导航| 六合彩天线宝宝| 名人百家乐官网的玩法技巧和规则 | 百家乐官网有方式赢钱吗| 百家乐路单之我见| 老虎机小游戏| 百家乐官网qq游戏| 大发888 备用6222| 赌百家乐官网的玩法技巧和规则| bet365体育在线下载| 娱乐城百家乐怎么样| 洛宁县| 至尊百家乐| 阳宅24方位判断方法| 二八杠分析仪| 百家乐官网娱乐城| 大发888官方下载网址| 真人百家乐宣传| 东乌| 缅甸百家乐龙虎斗| 百家乐官网首页红利| 白菜娱乐城| 乐享百家乐的玩法技巧和规则| 太阳城百家乐官网公司| 淘金盈| 威尼斯人娱乐场五星| 欢乐谷娱乐城官网| 真钱百家乐五湖四海全讯网 | 百家乐遥控牌靴| 大发888网站是多少| 百家乐赌场现金网| 24山是那二十四山| 百家乐官网投注必胜法| 大发888平台下载| 钱隆百家乐分析| 格龙24山五行| 百家乐官网游戏大小|