Blood Advances (Feb 2018)

Hematopoiesis by iPSC-derived hematopoietic stem cells of aplastic anemia that escape cytotoxic T-cell attack

  • J. Luis Espinoza,
  • Mahmoud I. Elbadry,
  • Kazuhisa Chonabayashi,
  • Yoshinori Yoshida,
  • Takamasa Katagiri,
  • Kenichi Harada,
  • Noriharu Nakagawa,
  • Yoshitaka Zaimoku,
  • Tatsuya Imi,
  • Hiroyuki Takamatsu,
  • Tatsuhiko Ozawa,
  • Hiroyuki Maruyama,
  • Hassan A. Hassanein,
  • Amal Khalifa A. Noreldin,
  • Katsuto Takenaka,
  • Koichi Akashi,
  • Hiroshi Hamana,
  • Hiroyuki Kishi,
  • Yoshiki Akatsuka,
  • Shinji Nakao

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2, no. 4
pp. 390 – 400

Abstract

Read online

Abstract: Hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) that lack HLA-class I alleles as a result of copy-number neutral loss of heterozygosity of the short arm of chromosome 6 (6pLOH) or HLA allelic mutations often constitute hematopoiesis in patients with acquired aplastic anemia (AA), but the precise mechanisms underlying clonal hematopoiesis induced by these HLA-lacking (HLA−) HSCs remain unknown. To address this issue, we generated induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) from an AA patient who possessed HLA-B4002–lacking (B4002−) leukocytes. Three different iPSC clones (wild-type [WT], 6pLOH+, and B*40:02-mutant) were established from the patient's monocytes. Three-week cultures of the iPSCs in the presence of various growth factors produced hematopoietic cells that make up 50% to 70% of the CD34+ cells of each phenotype. When 106 iPSC-derived CD34+ (iCD34+) cells with the 3 different genotypes were injected into the femoral bone of C57BL/6.Rag2 mice, 2.1% to 7.3% human multilineage CD45+ cells of each HLA phenotype were detected in the bone marrow, spleen, and peripheral blood of the mice at 9 to 12 weeks after the injection, with no significant difference in the human:mouse chimerism ratio among the 3 groups. Stimulation of the patient's CD8+ T cells with the WT iCD34+ cells generated a cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) line capable of killing WT iCD34+ cells but not B4002− iCD34+ cells. These data suggest that B4002− iCD34+ cells show a repopulating ability similar to that of WT iCD34+ cells when autologous T cells are absent and CTL precursors capable of selectively killing WT HSCs are present in the patient's peripheral blood.