Fig. 6.
Impaired lymphomyeloid differentiation of human long-term repopulating cells overexpressing HOXB4 in NOD/SCID mice.
The FACS profile of the BM of a representative mouse receiving a transplant of HOXB4 (FMEV-HAHOXB4wPRE)–transduced cells (67.9% GFP+/CD34+ cells) is shown at 8 weeks after cell injection. Forward-scatter/side-scatter properties and propidium iodide staining were used to exclude dead cells from analysis. Human CD45+ cells were gated and analyzed for GFP marker gene expression. Subsequently, the proportion of primitive human cells (CD34+), myeloid cells (CD33+), and B-lymphoid cells (CD19+) were determined in the population of nontransduced human cells (R4: GFP−/CD45+), in the total population of HOXB4-transduced cells (R5: GFP+/CD45+), and in the subpopulation of transduced cells expressing HOXB4 at very high levels (R6: GFP+++/CD45+). The frequency of lymphoid and myeloid differentiated cells was significantly lower in the compartment of HOXB4-transduced cells (all GFP+, central histogram panel) than in the nontransduced cell population (GFP−, left panel), whereas the frequency of primitive CD34+ cells was concurrently increased in the population of HOXB4-expressing cells. In particular, this altered lineage contribution was enhanced in the transduced cells expressing HOXB4 at very high levels (right panel).