3 resultados para megakaryocyte
em AMS Tesi di Dottorato - Alm@DL - Università di Bologna
Resumo:
La PKCε e la PKCδ, chinasi ubiquitariamente distribuite e ad azione pleiotropica, sono implicate del differenziamento, sopravvivenza e proliferazione cellulare. Esse sono coinvolte nel processo differenziativo delle cellule staminali ematopoietiche e in fenomeni patologici associati al compartimento sanguigno. In questa tesi sono presentati i risultati riguardanti lo studio in vitro del ruolo di PKCε e PKCδ nel contesto del differenziamento megacariocitario, in particolare si caratterizza l’espressione e la funzione di queste chinasi nel modello umano e nel modello murino di Megacariocitopoiesi, normale e patologica. Confrontando le cinetiche dei due modelli presi in analisi nello studio è stato possibile osservare come in entrambi PKCε e PKCδ dimostrino avere una chiara e specifica modulazione nel progredire del processo differenziativo. Questi dati, se confrontati, permettono di affermare che PKCε e PKCδ presentano un pattern di espressione opposto e, nel modello umano rispetto a quello murino, reciproco: nell’uomo i livelli di PKCε devono essere down-modulati, mentre nel topo, al contrario, i livelli della chinasi risultano up-modulati durante lo stesso processo. Analogamente, le CD34+ in differenziazione presentano una costante e maggiore espressione di PKCδ durante la maturazione MK, mentre nel modello murino tale proteina risulta down-modulata nella fase più tardiva di formazione della piastrina. Le chinasi mostrano in oltre di agire, nei due modelli, attraverso pathways distinti e cioè RhoA nel topo e Bcl-xL nell’uomo. È stato inoltre verificato che l’aberrante differenziamento MK osservato nella mielofibrosi primaria (PMF), è associato a difetti di espressione di PKCε e di Bcl-xL e che una forzata down-modulazione di PKCε porta ad un ripristino di un normale livello di espressione di Bcl-xL così come della popolazione di megacariociti formanti propiastrine. I dati ottenuti indicano quindi che PKCε e PKCδ svolgono un ruolo importante nel corretto differenziamento MK e che PKCε potrebbe essere un potenziale nuovo target terapeutico nelle PMF.
Resumo:
Primary Myelofibrosis (PMF) is the end-stage of Philadelphia-negative myeloproliferative neoplasms (MPN) and is characterized by fibrosis and hematopoietic failure in bone marrow, with a consequential migration of the malignant hematopoietic stem cells (HSC) in the spleen where they induce ineffective haematopoiesis. To date, available therapies for PMF are still palliative and do not halt the progression of this neoplasm. During my PhD years, our laboratory investigated the factors promoting the onset and progression of PMF. In our PMF mice model, Gata1low mouse, we studied the role of the interaction of HSC niche with megakaryocytes and HSC localization in the bone marrow during their division and cycle. We observed the inflammation and the main protagonists (LNC-2, CXCL1, and TGF-β) of this process and how their level changes before and after the onset of the disease. We investigated the different megakaryocyte populations in the fibrotic environment in different organs (lung and bone marrow) to define the megakaryocytes implicated in this process. In human samples, we described different ultrastructural abnormalities of megakaryocytes from the bone marrow and the spleen, identifying a possible different metabolism in those two populations. In conclusion, we highlighted the intricated crosstalk between the megakaryocytes, the niche and HSC in PMF. We identified megakaryocytes-dependent cytokines altering the homeostasis of the niche and HSC. Those cytokines could be used as alternative therapeutic targets. Furthermore, we observed different megakaryocytic populations in different organs, providing new prospective on the role of megakaryocytes in different microenvironments.
Resumo:
Primary myelofibrosis is a clonal hematopoietic disorder characterized by marked degrees of systemic inflammation. The release of pro-inflammatory factors by clonal hematopoietic cell populations cause the remodeling of a specialized microenvironment, defined niche, in which the hematopoietic stem cells reside. The main source of pro-inflammatory cytokines is represented by malignant megakaryocytes. The bone marrow and spleen from myelofibrosis patients, as well as those from the Gata1low mouse model of the disease, contain increased number of abnormal megakaryocytes. These cells express on their surface high levels of the adhesion receptor P-selectin that, by triggering a pathological megakaryocyte-neutrophil emperipolesis, lead to increased bioavailability of TGF-β1 in the microenvironment and disease progression. Gata1low mice develop with age a phenotype similar to that of patients with myelofibrosis. We previously demonstrated that deletion of the P-selectin gene in Gata1low mice prevented the development of the myelofibrotic phenotype in these mice. In the current study, we tested the hypothesis that pharmacological inhibition of P-selectin may rescue the fibrotic phenotype of Gata1low mice. To test this hypothesis, we have investigated the phenotype expressed by old Gata1low mice treated with the anti-mouse monoclonal antibody against P-selectin RB40.34, alone or in combination with the JAK2 inhibitor Ruxolitinib. The results showed that the combined therapy normalized the phenotype of Gata1low mice with limited toxicity by reducing fibrosis, TGF-β1 and CXCL1 content in the BM and spleen and by restoring hematopoiesis in the bone marrow and the normal architecture of the spleen. In conclusion, pharmacological inhibition of P-selectin was effective in targeting malignant megakaryocytes and the microenvironmental abnormalities that affect the hematopoietic stem cell compartment in this model. These results suggest that P-selectin and JAK1/2 inhibitors in combination may represent a valid therapeutic option for patients with myelofibrosis.