This report describes stroma-based and stroma-free cultures that maintain long-term engrafting hematopoietic cells for at least 14 days ex vivo. Umbilical cord blood (UCB) CD34+ cells were cultured in transwells above AFT024 feeders with fetal-liver-tyrosine-kinase (FL) + stem cell factor (SCF) + interleukin 7 (IL-7), or FL + thrombopoietin (Tpo). CD34+ progeny were transplanted into nonobese diabetic-severe combined immunodeficiency (NOD-SCID) mice or preimmune fetal sheep. SCID repopulating cells (SRC) with multilineage differentiation potential were maintained in FL-SCF-IL-7 or FL-Tpo containing cultures for up to 28 days. Marrow from mice highly engrafted with uncultured or expanded cells induced multilineage human hematopoiesis in 50% of secondary but not tertiary recipients. Day 7 expanded cells engrafted primary, secondary, and tertiary fetal sheep. Day 14 expanded cells, although engrafting primary and to a lesser degree secondary fetal sheep, failed to engraft tertiary recipients. SRC that can be transferred to secondary recipients were maintained for at least 14 days in medium containing glycosaminoglycans and cytokines found in stromal supernatants. This is the first demonstration that ex vivo culture in stroma-noncontact and stroma-free cultures maintains “long-term” engrafting cells, defined by their capacity to engraft secondary or tertiary hosts.
Introduction
Ex vivo expansion of hematopoietic cells is needed not only for gene transfer1-3 and tumor purging,4,5 but also to amplify the number of hematopoietic stem cells (HSC), especially in umbilical cord blood (UCB) grafts. The use of UCB as a source of HSC is increasing because there is less incidence of graft-versus-host disease after UCB transplantation.6 7 This allows use of grafts with greater HLA disparity and therefore increases the number of grafts available for transplantation. However, absolute HSC dose is a limiting factor in the use of UCB as a graft for adult transplant recipients.
Hematopoiesis is a tightly regulated process in which HSC give rise to all components of the hematopoietic system for the lifetime of the individual. Properties of HSC are self-renewal, multilineage differentiation capacity, and ability to repopulate a myeloablated host. Assays such as the long-term culture-initiating cell (LTC-IC)8 and extended LTC-IC assays9 measure the ability of cells to generate myeloid progenitors after a prolonged period in culture. However, these assays do not measure self-renewal, multilineage potential, or engraftment potential of progenitors. Although the recent development of the myeloid-lymphoid initiating cell assay (ML-IC)10 and the self-renewing ML-IC assay (H. Liu and C.M.V., submitted) has allowed in vitro observation of multilineage differentiation and self-renewal of single cells, assessment of the engrafting ability of human HSC requires transplant models. Several xenogeneic models have been developed, including transplantation into the humanized severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID) mouse,11 into nonobese diabetic (NOD)-SCID mice,12 the Beige-Nude-Xid (BNX) mouse13 and preimmune fetal sheep.14,15 The engrafting human cell in NOD-SCID or SCID mice has been defined as the SCID-repopulating cell (SRC) or competitive repopulating unit (CRU), a cell that may be more primitive than LTC-IC.11 In addition, several groups have used autologous or allogeneic transplantation in rhesus or baboon monkeys as a model for human stem cells.16 17 Each of these assays has its own advantages and disadvantages. How efficient they are at measuring human HSC and how they compare with in vitro assays that measure primitive progenitors is not known.
Ex vivo culture systems can be used to expand committed progenitors or accessory cells.18,19 Here we focused on the use of ex vivo expansion cultures to increase the number of long-term repopulating cells that have self-renewal and multilineage differentiation capacity. Several ex vivo expansion systems have been developed, including cytokine-rich stroma-free systems that may or may not contain serum or systems in which hematopoiesis is supported by a stromal feeder. The majority of studies in which progenitors are cultured in stroma-free, serum-free, or serum-containing cytokine-supplemented conditions show that culture for less than 6 days results in a modest increase in SRC frequency, but loss of SRC if the cultures are extended for longer periods.15,20,21 One recent study from Piacibello and coworkers reported a more than 50-fold expansion of SRC when UCB CD34+ cells were cultured for 6 to 10 weeks in a human serum–containing system with fetal-liver-tyrosine-kinase-ligand (FL), thrombopoietin (Tpo), and/or stem cell factor (SCF) and interleukin 6 (IL-6).22
A number of murine-derived stromal cell lines have been cloned that support not only murine repopulating cells but also primitive human hematopoietic progenitors.10,23-25 However, coculture of human cells with the murine feeder will not be suitable for clinical ex vivo expansion. We developed noncontact cultures in which cells are cultured in a transwell above a stromal feeder and have shown that primitive LTC-IC, natural killer culture-initiating cell (NK-IC) and ML-IC are maintained to the same or greater degree than when cells are cocultured in contact with feeders.10 26 Because human CD34+ cells remain separated from the murine feeder, noncontact cultures avoid some of the practical problems associated with contact cultures.
We describe here the ability of the murine fetal liver cell line, AFT024, to maintain/expand human UCB CD34+ repopulating cells assayed in the NOD-SCID mouse and the fetal sheep model. We found that culture of UCB CD34+ cells for up to 28 days in an AFT024 noncontact system supplemented with a combination of early acting cytokines, including SCF, FL, Tpo, and IL-7, maintains repopulating cells in NOD/SCID as well as fetal sheep. We provide the first evidence that ex vivo expanded cells continue to contain “long-term” repopulating cells because they can be serially passaged to secondary NOD-SCID mice and secondary and tertiary fetal sheep.
Materials and methods
Isolation of cells
After informed consent was obtained, UCB cells were collected by standard procedures used for UCB banking. Mononuclear cells (MNC) were obtained by Ficoll-Hypaque (Sigma Diagnostics, St Louis, MO) density gradient centrifugation. CD34+ cells were isolated by magnetic cell separation (MACS system; Miltenyi Biotec, Auburn, CA). Procedures were performed as per manufacturer's recommendations. CD34+ cells were cryopreserved in 10% dimethylsulfoxide (Sigma), 20% fetal calf serum (FCS, Hyclone Laboratories, Logan, UT) by controlled-rate freezing. Following thawing, samples were usually pooled to provide sufficient cell numbers for each experiment.
Stromal feeder
The murine fetal liver cell line, AFT024 (a kind gift from Dr I. Lemischka, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ)27 was maintained at 33°C in Dulbecco modified Eagle medium (DMEM; Gibco-BRL, Grand Island, NY) supplemented with 20% FCS, 50 μmol/L 2-mercaptoethanol (2-ME, Biorad, Hercules, CA). Cells were subcultured in 6- or 96-well plates (Costar, Cambridge, MA), grown to confluency, and then irradiated at 2000 rads using a Mark 1 Cesium irradiator (Shepard, Glendale, CA) 24 hours prior to establishing cultures, as previously described.10
Expansion cultures
Noncontact cultures.
Cells were plated in collagen coated transwells with a 0.4-μm microporous filter (Transwell-COL, Costar) above AFT024 feeders (noncontact) established in 6-well plates (Costar) as previously described.28 Initial cell concentration was 40 000 CD34+ cells/mL for 7-day cultures and 20 000 cells/mL for 14-day cultures. Individual wells contained 5 mL medium of which 2 mL contained the cells within the transwell. Medium consisted of RPMI supplemented with 20% FCS, 1000 U/mL penicillin, 100 U/mL streptomycin (Gibco-BRL), and 50 μmol/L 2-ME. Cytokine cocktails incorporated 10 ng/mL FL (Immunex, Seattle, WA), 10 ng/mL SCF (Amgen, Thousand Oaks, CA), 10 ng/mL IL–7 (R&D Systems, Minneapolis, MN), and/or 10 ng/mL Tpo (Amgen). Medium was added once at day 0 and changed every 7 days for 14- and 28-day cultures.
MV8 stroma-free cultures.
Medium consisted of RPMI + 20% FCS with 250 pg/mL granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF) (Amgen), 200 pg/mL macrophage-inflammatory protein-1α (MIP-1α; R&D Systems), 1 ng/mL IL-6 (R&D Systems), 10 ng/mL monocyte-chemoattractant protein-1 (MCP-1; R&D Systems), 10 ng/mL vascular endothelial cell growth factor (VEGF) (a kind gift from Dr S. Ramakrishnan, University of Minnesota) 2 ng/mL IL-8 (R&D Systems), and 10 μg/mL N-desulfated O-sulfated heparin (Seikagaku America, Falmouth, MA).29 30 Cultures also contained 10 ng/mL Tpo, 20 ng/mL FL, 20 ng/mL SCF, and 20 ng/mL IL-7. Media were replenished every 48 hours.
LTC-IC and colony-forming cell assays
Thawed CD34+ cells (day 0) and CD34+cell progeny from expansion cultures were plated in limiting dilutions in LTC-IC, as well as in colony-forming cell (CFC) assays. LTC-IC assays were performed as described.28 31 For LTC-IC assays, cells were plated in 4 dilutions of 22 replicates on preirradiated AFT024-coated 96-well plates. Medium consisted of Iscoves modified Dulbecco medium (IMDM) supplemented with 12.5% FCS, 12.5% horse serum (Stem Cell Technologies, Vancouver, BC, Canada), 1000 U/mL penicillin, 100 U/mL streptomycin, 2 μmol l-glutamine (Gibco-BRL), and 10−6 μmol hydrocortisone. Cultures were maintained for 5 weeks with a half-medium change weekly. Medium was then completely removed and replaced with clonogenic methylcellulose medium consisting of 1.12% methylcellulose (Fisher, Chicago, IL), IMDM, 30% FCS, 3 U/mL erythropoietin (Amgen), and supernatant of the bladder cell carcinoma cell line 5637 (7.5%). After 2 weeks, wells were evaluated for the presence or absence of hematopoietic colonies and scored as positive or negative, respectively. LTC-IC frequency was then calculated according to Poisson statistics.
For CFC enumeration, 750 CD34+ cells or their progeny from expansion cultures were plated in methylcellulose containing IMDM supplemented with 30% FCS, 3 IU erythropoietin (Amgen), 10 ng/mL each of IL-3 (R&D Systems), G-CSF, and granulocyte-macrophage-CSF (GM-CSF; Immunex) as previously described.31 Cultures were incubated in a humidified atmosphere at 37°C and 5% CO2and evaluated after 14 days for the presence of colony-forming units-granulocyte macrophage (CFU-GM) or burst forming units-erythroid (BFU-E).
Transplantation experiments
NOD-SCID recipients.
A breeding colony of NOD-SCID mice was established from mice obtained from the Jackson Laboratories (Bar Harbor, ME). Mice were kept in specific pathogen-free conditions and maintained on acidified water and autoclaved food. Trimethoprim 60 mg and sulfamethoxazole 300 mg (Hoffmann-La Roche, Nutley, NJ) per 100 mL water was given twice weekly. At 6 to 8 weeks of age, mice were irradiated with 300 to 325 cGy at 57 cGy/min by a Mark 1 Cesium irradiator. Transplantation of UCB cells by tail vein injection occurred 24 hours after irradiation. Cell doses ranged from 25 to 150 × 103 CD34+cells on day 0 (ie, uncultured) or the progeny of an identical number of cultured cells on days 7, 14, or 28. Six weeks after transplantation, mice were killed by cervical dislocation. Bone marrow (BM) was obtained by flushing femurs and tibias with IMDM 20% FCS. Cells from engrafted animals were then used for either secondary transplant experiments or extended phenotypes. When more than 2% human CD45+ cells were present in the murine marrow, cells from 2 femurs and 2 tibias were transplanted into individual secondary mouse recipients.
Assessment of donor cell engraftment was by detection of the human- specific pan-leukocyte antigen CD45 (Becton Dickinson Immunocytometry Systems, San Jose, CA) conjugated to fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC) or peridinin chlorophyll (PerCP). Three-color phenotyping was performed by staining cells with antihuman CD45 PerCP (Becton Dickinson), antimouse CD45 FITC (Pharmingen, San Diego, CA), and antihuman CD3 phycoerythrin (PE), CD14 PE, CD19 PE, CD33 PE, or CD34 PE (all from Becton Dickinson). Appropriate isotype controls were used. The frequency of the engrafting human cell in the mouse, defined as an SRC, was calculated by limiting dilution analysis. Mice were infused with increasing cell numbers and engraftment defined as detection of more than 0.5% human CD45+ cells. SRC frequency was calculated by Poisson statistics.12
Fetal sheep recipients.
Freshly uncultured or cultured cells were suspended in IMDM + 20% FCS, 10 ng/mL FL, SCF, and IL-7, and shipped overnight at room temperature to the University of Nevada, Reno.32 Fifty (group X) to 100 (group I) × 103 uncultured CD34+ cells or the progeny of an identical number of cells cultured for 7 (group XI and II) or 14 (group XII and III) days were injected into preimmune (day 57-62 of gestation) fetal sheep recipients using the amniotic bubble procedure as described (Figure1).14,15 In some experiments, animals were killed 60 days after transplantation and BM analyzed for human cells. The BM also served as the source of CD45+ cells for transplant into secondary recipients. Alternatively, animals were allowed to be born and BM examined 6 months after transplantation. For secondary transplants, human CD45+ cells were isolated from the BM of primary recipients from groups I, II, and III at 60 days after transplant by panning as described previously.14 15 The CD45+ cells from the 2 animals from each group were pooled, analyzed for CD34+ cell content, and injected into 3 secondary fetal recipients (group I, group IV, group II, group V, group III, group VI). Animals were killed on day 60 after transplantation and the BM cells were analyzed for the presence of human cells. Marrow of these secondary recipients served as the source of CD45+ cells transplanted into tertiary recipients. Because the number of CD45+ cells was extremely low in the secondary recipients in group VI, whole marrow was transplanted in tertiary recipients (group IV, group VII, group V, group VIII, group VI, group IX). All recipients were killed on day 60 after transplantation and the BM cells were analyzed for the presence of human cells.
For assessment of donor cell engraftment, BM MNC from the fetal and newborn sheep transplanted with human cells were analyzed for the presence of human cells by flow cytometry as previously described.32 33 Briefly, MNC were isolated from BM by hypotonic lysis of contaminating red cells. Antibodies specific for human CD3, CD20, CD33, CD34, CD45, and glycophorin A (Becton Dickinson) were conjugated to either FITC or PE. In each sample, 5 × 105 cells were labeled and expression of each antigen compared to the appropriate nonbinding isotype-matched control. Expression levels of 0.2% or more could be detected.
In addition, BM MNC were cultured in methylcellulose (0.4-2 × 105 cells/mL) with supplemental erythropoietin (2 IU/mL), IL-3 (5 ng/mL), and GM-CSF (5 ng/mL) and human CFU-GM and CFU-Mix enumerated as described.32
Statistical analysis
Results of experimental points obtained from multiple experiments are expressed as the mean ± SEM.
Results
In a first series of experiments, we examined if culture in a noncontact system using AFT024 as a stromal feeder supports UCB CD34+ cells that engraft NOD-SCID mice. Freshly thawed UCB CD34+ cells were transplanted in limiting dilutions into NOD-SCID recipients. Alternatively, identical numbers of CD34+ cells were cultured for 7 and 14 days in AFT024 noncontact cultures supplemented with FL, SCF, and IL-7, and progeny of limiting dilutions of CD34+ cells transplanted in NOD-SCID mice. The cytokine combination was chosen based on studies from our group demonstrating that BM LTC-IC and NK-IC can be expanded under these conditions10 (Table1).
When transplanted with uncultured cells, 43 of 55 (78%) mice engrafted at levels of 0.5% to 26% (mean 6.5%). A higher mean engraftment level was noted with increasing cell doses although the frequency of engraftment did not change with increasing cell doses. The SRC frequency was 3.4/105 uncultured CD34+ cells (2.3-5.1, 95% confidence limits). When transplanted with cells cultured for 7 days, 41 of 55 (75%) mice engrafted at levels of 0.5% to 26% (mean 4.6%). The effect of cell dose on engraftment was not as apparent at this time point, although there was a trend toward a higher level of engraftment with increasing cell dose. The SRC frequency was 2.7/105 CD34+ cells (1.8-4.1, 95% confidence limits). When transplanted with cells cultured for 14 days, 34 of 43 (79%) mice engrafted at levels of 1.0% to 57% (mean 7.2%). No effect of cell dose on the level of engraftment was seen. The SRC frequency was 4.0/105 CD34+ cells (2.4-6.7, 95% confidence limits). Thus, SRC frequency as well as level of engraftment of UCB CD34+ cells is maintained following culture in an AFT024 noncontact system with FL + SCF + IL-7 for at least 14 days.
We next compared the ability of AFT024 noncontact cultures supplemented with FL, SCF, and IL-7 to support SRC with a similar system supplemented with FL and Tpo. The latter combination is superior to an FL, SCF, and IL-7 containing AFT024 noncontact system in expanding primitive myeloid and lymphoid progenitors from UCB.26 We also tested a stroma-free system as a preliminary step toward producing a more clinically applicable system. Cultures were established and after 7 and 14 days, we examined the number of nucleated cells, CD34+ cells, CFC, LTC-IC, and SRC (Tables2 and3).
Culture of UCB CD34+ cells in AFT024 noncontact with FL, SCF, IL-7 produced a 76-fold increase in total nucleated cells (TNC) with associated 16-fold increase in CD34+cells at day 14. Culture of UCB CD34+ cells in AFT024 noncontact with FL and Tpo yielded a 37-fold expansion in TNC and 8-fold expansion of CD34+ cells after 14 days. Culture in MV8 stroma-free cultures led to a 180-fold expansion of TNC by day 14, whereas CD34+ cells expanded only 2-fold. CFC and LTC-IC expansion was similar for all groups (Table 2).
Mice were injected with 4 doses (25, 50, 75, and 100 × 103 cells) of uncultured UCB CD34+cells. The mean engraftment levels were 13.1%, 9.0%, 4.7%, and 2.4%, respectively (Table 3). The SRC frequency was 3.8/105 uncultured CD34+ cells. The same doses of CD34+ were cultured for 7 and 14 days in each of the 3 culture conditions and progeny transplanted. Engraftment results after 7 and 14 days of culture in each of the conditions tested are summarized in Table 3. Consistent with what we describe above, the SRC frequencies in CD34+ cells cultured in FL, SCF, and IL-7 AFT024 culture conditions were 8.3/105 CD34+cells and 3.6/105 CD34+ cells on days 7 and 14, respectively. SRC frequencies in FL and Tpo conditions were 3.2/105 CD34+ cells and 7.2/105CD34+ cells on days 7 and 14, respectively. When cells were cultured in stroma-free cultures for 7 days, the SRC frequency was 1.2/105 CD34+ cells, and after 14 days, 6.1/105 CD34+ cells. Levels of human engraftment were similar for the 3 culture conditions.
Studies from our laboratory indicate that expansion of primitive LTC-IC and NK-IC in AFT024-noncontact cultures supplemented with FL and Tpo is greater at 5 than 2 weeks.26 Similar results have been described by Piacibello and coworkers.34 We therefore tested whether engrafting cells could be maintained for longer periods in AFT024 noncontact culture with FL and Tpo or FL, SCF, and IL-7. After culture for 28 days, 3 of 5 mice transplanted with the progeny of 105 CD34+ UCB cells expanded in FL and Tpo engrafted at levels of 2%, 2%, and 3%. At a cell dose of 5 × 10,4 1 of 2 mice engrafted at a level of 3%. Two of 2 mice transplanted with the progeny of 105 cells expanded for 28 days in FL, SCF, and IL-7 engrafted at levels of 2% and 3%.
To demonstrate that primitive progenitors engrafted, we examined if multilineage engraftment was obtained and whether cells could be serially passaged to secondary and tertiary recipients. No CD3+ T cells were detected in animals that received either day 0, day 7, or day 14 engrafted cells. However, 17.5% of human CD45+ cells from day 0 engrafted cells were CD14+, 48.8% CD19+, 42% CD33+, and 13.8% CD34+ (Figure 2and Table 3). Culture in an AFT024 noncontact system supplemented with either FL, SCF, and IL-7, or FL and Tpo, or culture in a stroma-free system resulted in a similar distribution of each marker.
We next tested whether human cells could be transferred to secondary and tertiary NOD-SCID mice. All BM cells obtained from 2 femurs and 2 tibiae of single primary NOD-SCID animals that had more than 2% human CD45+ cells were transplanted into single secondary NOD-SCID animals (1:5 dilution). Eighteen animals received cells from animals engrafted with uncultured CD34+ cells, 18 mice received cells from animals engrafted with 7-day AFT024 noncontact cultured cells, and 17 mice received cells from animals engrafted with 14-day AFT024 noncontact cultured cells, and 2 and 2 animals received cells from primary recipients transplanted with cells expanded for 7 and 14 days, respectively, in stroma-free MV8 conditions. Human CD45+ cells at levels between 0.6% and 2% were found in 4 of 8 animals that received cells from primary recipients engrafted with noncultured cells. Six of 18 (5 of 11 FL + SCF + IL-7 and 1 of 7 FL + Tpo) mice who received day-7 cells from AFT024 noncontact culture engrafted at levels of 1% to 5%. Eight of 17 mice (4 of 9 FL + SCF + IL-7 and 4 of 8 FL + Tpo) who received day 14 cells engrafted at levels between 0.5% to 20%. One percent human CD45+ cells were detected in the secondary recipient of cells recovered from one animal transplanted with day-7 MV8 stroma-free cultured CD34+ cells and no engraftment was seen in secondary recipients of day 14 MV8 stroma-free cultured CD34+ cells. Marrow from the 2 femurs and 2 tibiae from 9 secondary transplant recipients with more than 1% human CD45+ cells in the marrow were transplanted into tertiary NOD-SCID recipients. No engraftment was seen irrespective of the initial source of the cells.
To further confirm these results and to evaluate if different in vivo xenogeneic transplantation models measure similar cells, we also tested the ability of uncultured and culture-expanded UCB CD34+cells to engraft preimmune fetal sheep. Cells were cultured in AFT024 noncontact conditions with FL, SCF, and IL-7 for 7 and 14 days. In the first set of experiments, pooled UCB was used to test the capacity of the cultured cells to engraft in primary recipients and to be serially passaged from primary to secondary and tertiary fetal sheep recipients. The results of these experiments are summarized in Table4. Fetal sheep transplanted with 105 uncultured CD34+ cells (group I) had 4.8% ± 0.7% human CD45+ cells in the marrow 2 months after transplantation and this persisted for at least 6 months (4.1% ± 0.5% human CD45+ cells). Fetal sheep transplanted with day 7 cultured cells (group II) had 6.3% ± 1.4% human CD45+ cells at 2 months and 4.3% ± 0.9% human CD45+ cells at 6 months. Fetal sheep transplanted with day-14 cultured cells (group III) engrafted at 5.6% ± 0.5% human CD45+ cells at 2 months, but this fell to 0.2% ± 0.2% human CD45+ cells at 6 months. A second experiment was done in which 5 × 104 CD34+ cells, fresh or after day 7 or day 14 of culture, from a single UCB were transplanted into preimmune fetuses (groups X, XI, XII) (Table 4). Two months after transplantation, animals were killed and human cell engraftment evaluated. Again, similar levels of human cell engraftment were seen for uncultured and ex vivo– expanded cells.
We also examined if human cells could be serially transplanted in secondary and tertiary recipients as another measure for long-term engrafting cells. Secondary and tertiary fetal sheep recipients were evaluated 2 months after transplantation. Marrow of secondary (group IV) and tertiary (group VII) recipients of uncultured cells had 5.2% and 4.7% human CD45+ cells, respectively, at 2 months. Marrow of secondary (group V) and tertiary (group VIII) recipients of day-7 cultured cells had 4.4% and 0.8% human CD45+ cells, respectively, at 2 months. Again, multilineage engraftment was seen (Figure 3). Marrow of secondary recipients of day-14 cultured cells (group VI) had less than 0.5% human CD45+ cells and no human cells could be detected in tertiary recipients of day-14 cultured cells (group IX). In all engrafted animals, multilineage hematopoiesis was seen (Table5).
Discussion
Increased understanding of the regulatory processes involved in normal hematopoiesis has led to the development of a number of different culture systems aimed at expanding hematopoietic cell populations. A culture system that will expand HSC must increase the absolute number of primitive hematopoietic cells while maintaining their ability to produce multilineage progeny and repopulate myeloablated recipients. Several groups have developed stroma-free culture systems supplemented with multiple early acting cytokines. All but one study found limited expansion of cells capable of repopulating NOD-SCID mice or fetal sheep.15,20,21 Likewise, culture of progenitors on allogeneic human stromal feeders resulted in loss of engraftment capacity of both marrow and UCB CD34+cells.35
Several stromal feeders have been cloned that support long-term repopulating cells from murine, human, and primate sources. For instance, irradiated baboons were rescued when transplanted with autologous marrow cultured on a porcine microvascular cell line for 7 days.17 When cocultured with the murine stromal cell line, AC6.21, human CD34+Thy-1+ cells continued to contain SRC.36 This suggests maintenance/expansion of at least short-term repopulating cells. Because studies were either in the autologous setting or without serial transplantation, it is not possible to assess whether HSC that can repopulate long-term were maintained/expanded. One drawback of these culture systems is that cells are cultured in contact with the stromal layer, which would not be clinically applicable.
We have used a noncontact culture system as the basis for HSC expansion, and used 2 in vivo transplantation models in which cells are serially transferred to secondary and tertiary recipients to address the question of expansion of long-term engrafting cells. We used the AFT024 feeder, derived by Lemischka and colleagues from murine fetal liver.27 AFT024 cells support maintenance of competitive repopulating murine stem cells for more than 7 weeks as well as growth of LTC-IC, E-LTC-IC, NK-IC, and ML-IC.10,23,25,37 We have previously reported that ex vivo culture of human UCB CD34+Lin−CD38− cells in AFT024 noncontact cultures supplemented with FL + SCF + IL-7 results in a 3- to 5-fold expansion of LTC-IC and NK-IC after 2 and 5 weeks.26 We now show that when UCB CD34+ cells were cultured in AFT024-noncontact cultures containing FL + SCF + IL-7, SRC frequency increases 1.3- to 2-fold after 7 and 14 days of culture. We did not detect significant differences when cells were cultured in the presence of FL + Tpo rather than FL + SCF + IL-7. Interestingly, we have previously shown that the FL + Tpo cytokine combination is superior at expanding LTC-IC and NK-IC over FL + SCF + IL-7.26 The discordance between results from in vitro LTC-IC and NK-IC assays and in vivo NOD-SCID engraftment assays may indicate that these assays measure cells at a slightly different stage of differentiation. Alternatively, homing may be more defective in the absence of SCF in the expansion medium, leading to a further underestimation of SRC in cultures without this cytokine.38 Cultured SRC had multilineage differentiation ability, and more importantly, were able to engraft secondary NOD-SCID mice, thus confirming that the AFT024-noncontact system maintains human progenitors that can repopulate recipients for at least 6 months. Engrafting cells were lost when transferred to tertiary recipients, but this was true for cells that were transplanted before or after ex vivo culture and may reflect the 1:5 dilution done with each transfer step and the sequential loss of progenitors due to the low seeding efficiency of SRC.46
To further demonstrate that the AFT024 noncontact system can maintain/expand HSC, we transplanted uncultured and ex vivo– expanded UCB CD34+ cells in preimmune fetal sheep. This also provided us with the unique opportunity to compare the 2 xenogeneic transplantation models. Although the NOD-SCID model may be the most commonly used assay to measure engrafting human cells, a number of studies suggest that serial transplantation to examine presence of long-term repopulating cells is more easily achieved in the fetal sheep than NOD-SCID model.15,39,40 Serial evaluation of marrow of sheep recipients for more than 6 months to several years, which cannot be done in the NOD-SCID model, is another way to measure presence of long-term engrafting human cells. In addition, Civin and colleagues have demonstrated that serial transfer of human cells to secondary and tertiary fetal sheep recipients allows detection of the most primitive progenitors. They showed that in contrast to CD34+CD38− progenitors, CD38+CD34+ cells that engraft in primary sheep recipients cannot be transferred to subsequent recipients model.14 This coincided with the ability of CD34+CD38− but not CD34+CD38+ cells to give rise to human hematopoiesis for more than 1 year in the primary recipients.
We also evaluated “long-term” engraftment. We examined sheep 6 months after transplantation or transfer of cells into secondary and tertiary fetal sheep recipients. Cells cultured ex vivo in AFT024 cultures supplemented with FL + SCF + IL-7 could support high levels of human hematopoietic cell engraftment 6 months after transplantation and could be serially transferred to secondary and even tertiary sheep recipients. Cells cultured for 7 days ex vivo produced multilineage engraftment in primary recipients at 6 months and also in secondary and tertiary fetal sheep recipients. These findings, taken together with the data from the NOD/SCID model, strongly suggest that multilineage engrafting cells that persist for at least 6 months are at a minimum maintained in AFT024 noncontact cultures. In view of the report by Civin and coworkers, the finding that engrafting cells could be transferred to secondary and tertiary recipients suggests that long-term engrafting cells can be maintained. The degree of engraftment of cells cultured ex vivo for 7 days in the tertiary recipients was lower than that of uncultured cells. This may indicate that the frequency of long-term engrafting cells has declined somewhat during culture. However, no decreased engraftment was seen in the primary recipients at 6 months or in the secondary recipients. Limiting dilutions will be needed to determine the importance of this observation.
As we saw in the NOD-SCID model, day-14 expanded cells engrafted at 2 months in the fetal sheep model. Of note, serial transfer to secondary and tertiary sheep as well as assessment of the primary animals at 6 months showed that cells that could sustain human hematopoiesis for at least 6 months may decline significantly following 14 days of ex vivo expansion. This at first seems to contradict the results seen in the NOD-SCID model where no obvious differences were seen in secondary engraftment of day 7 and day 14 cultured cells. However, evaluation in the sheep model was at later time points than in the NOD-SCID model, as sheep are killed at 8 weeks rather than 6 weeks. Thus, our studies suggest that long-term engrafting cells may progressively decline with extended time in culture.
To make this system more clinically suitable, we examined if we could develop a stroma-free system that would reproduce results obtained in AFT024 noncontact cultures. The stroma-free system was developed based on knowledge gained on growth factors and extracellular matrix components present in stroma-conditioned medium that are required for the support of LTC-IC.29,30,41,42 We have previously reported on the importance of specific 6-O-sulfated heparan-sulfate glycosaminoglycans for maintaining LTC-IC ex vivo. In addition, we have identified cytokines elaborated by human stromal feeders required for LTC-IC growth. We combined these components with 3 cytokines found to be present in nanogram concentrations in AFT024 supernatants (MCP-1, VEGF, and IL-8) (unpublished observation, 1999) and added a mixture of FL + SCF + IL-7 + Tpo. Consistent with previous studies from our group,29,41 42 a 2- to 3-fold LTC-IC expansion was seen that is similar to that seen in AFT024 noncontact cultures. Engraftment was seen with day-7 and -14 expanded cells and the frequency in day-14 cultured cells was 1.6-fold higher than in uncultured cells. Engrafted cells maintained multilineage differentiation capacity, and in 1 of 4 animals tested, we found secondary transfer of human cells. Whether these cells can engraft in the fetal sheep model and support hematopoiesis in secondary and tertiary sheep or for protracted periods of time in primary sheep is currently under investigation. However, these initial results suggest that it may be possible to develop defined stroma-free systems based on knowledge gained on factors involved in hematopoietic regulation by AFT024 that will support maintenance/expansion of long-term engrafting human cells.
The variables involved in the engraftment of transplanted cells are not well understood. In particular, the role of cell dose and accessory cells in facilitating engraftment are variables we did not control in this study. Thus, animals receiving cells at day 7 and day 14 received much larger cell doses. Using a statistical model, van der Loo and coworkers demonstrated a dose-response relationship of mobilized peripheral blood CD34+ cells and engraftment.43 Using BM 34+lin−38− cells Bonnet and associates showed that low cell doses required cotransplantation of accessory cells but at doses of more than 5000 cells, accessory cells were not necessary.44 In the murine system, transplantation across allogeneic barriers is facilitated by the use of specific accessory cells.45 46 Whether these specific findings apply to UCB CD34+ cells cultured in our system remains to be determined.
In conclusion, we show for the first time that cells capable of “long-term” engraftment in fetal sheep or NOD-SCID mice can be preserved when cultured for 7, and possibly 14 days, ex vivo in an AFT024 noncontact culture system or even a stroma-free system modeled on the AFT024 noncontact culture system. Culture methods described here should lead to the development of a clinically suitable culture system for ex vivo expansion, and allow for final demonstration that the conditions support long-term engraftment in human clinical trials.
Supported in part by: R01-DK-53673 (to C.M.V.), P01-CA-65493 (to C.M.V.), HL-52955 (to E.D.Z.), HL-49042 (to E.D.Z.), DK-51427 (to E.D.Z.), the Veterans Administration, and Fairview-University of Minnesota. C.M.V. is a Scholar of the Leukemia Society of America.
The publication costs of this article were defrayed in part by page charge payment. Therefore, and solely to indicate this fact, this article is hereby marked “advertisement” in accordance with 18 U.S.C. section 1734.
References
Author notes
Catherine M. Verfaillie, Box 806 UMHC, 420 Delaware St SE, Minneapolis, MN 55455; e-mail: verfa001@tc.umn.edu.