AI Article Synopsis

  • Myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) originate from abnormal hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) that disrupt normal blood cell formation, potentially by altering self-renewal and differentiation feedback signals.
  • A mathematical model simulating MDS cell modifications showed that these cancerous cells need higher self-renewal rates than healthy HSCs to outcompete and suppress normal hematopoiesis.
  • Experimental analysis of serum from MDS patients indicated it could slightly enhance cell proliferation while reducing the primitive cell phenotype, suggesting local niche signals are key in regulating self-renewal and may contribute to cytopenia in MDS patients.

Article Abstract

Myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) are triggered by an aberrant hematopoietic stem cell (HSC). It is, however, unclear how this clone interferes with physiologic blood formation. In this study, we followed the hypothesis that the MDS clone impinges on feedback signals for self-renewal and differentiation and thereby suppresses normal hematopoiesis. Based on the theory that the MDS clone affects feedback signals for self-renewal and differentiation and hence suppresses normal hematopoiesis, we have developed a mathematical model to simulate different modifications in MDS-initiating cells and systemic feedback signals during disease development. These simulations revealed that the disease initiating cells must have higher self-renewal rates than normal HSCs to outcompete normal hematopoiesis. We assumed that self-renewal is the default pathway of stem and progenitor cells which is down-regulated by an increasing number of primitive cells in the bone marrow niche--including the premature MDS cells. Furthermore, the proliferative signal is up-regulated by cytopenia. Overall, our model is compatible with clinically observed MDS development, even though a single mutation scenario is unlikely for real disease progression which is usually associated with complex clonal hierarchy. For experimental validation of systemic feedback signals, we analyzed the impact of MDS patient derived serum on hematopoietic progenitor cells in vitro: in fact, MDS serum slightly increased proliferation, whereas maintenance of primitive phenotype was reduced. However, MDS serum did not significantly affect colony forming unit (CFU) frequencies indicating that regulation of self-renewal may involve local signals from the niche. Taken together, we suggest that initial mutations in MDS particularly favor aberrant high self-renewal rates. Accumulation of primitive MDS cells in the bone marrow then interferes with feedback signals for normal hematopoiesis--which then results in cytopenia.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3998886PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1003599DOI Listing

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