The density of CD10 corresponds to commitment and progression in the human B lymphoid lineage.

BACKGROUND:Requirements for human B lymphopoiesis are still poorly understood, and that has hampered investigation of differentiation events. For example, there are few cell surface antigens that can be used as milestones of lineage progression. The CD10 ectoenzyme is one such marker and has been us...

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Main Authors: Michiko Ichii, Kenji Oritani, Takafumi Yokota, Qingzhao Zhang, Karla P Garrett, Yuzuru Kanakura, Paul W Kincade
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2010-09-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2944886?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-c21487298c3a44ed9ad7dabae8ea83572020-11-25T02:14:44ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032010-09-0159e1295410.1371/journal.pone.0012954The density of CD10 corresponds to commitment and progression in the human B lymphoid lineage.Michiko IchiiKenji OritaniTakafumi YokotaQingzhao ZhangKarla P GarrettYuzuru KanakuraPaul W KincadeBACKGROUND:Requirements for human B lymphopoiesis are still poorly understood, and that has hampered investigation of differentiation events. For example, there are few cell surface antigens that can be used as milestones of lineage progression. The CD10 ectoenzyme is one such marker and has been used to define CLP, but we found substantial tissue specific variations in CD10 levels, and there was no information about how that corresponded to differentiation options. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS:The aim of the present study was to use recently developed culture methods to assess the nature and differentiation potential of progenitors sorted according to CD10 density from umbilical cord blood (CB), adult bone marrow (BM) or G-CSF mobilized peripheral blood (PB). Many CD34(+) cells in BM express high levels of CD10, while low or low/negative CD10 densities were found on CD34(+) cells in CB or G-CSF mobilized PB, respectively. The relative abundance of CD10(Lo) versus CD10(Hi) cells only accounts for some CB versus BM differences. Almost all of the CD34(+) CD10(Hi) cells expressed CD19 and lymphocyte transcription factors and corresponded to loss of myeloid potential. A high degree of immunoglobulin D(H)-J(H) gene rearrangements was characteristic only of the CD10(Hi) subset. In contrast, the CD34(+) CD10(Lo) progenitors efficiently produced plasmacytoid and conventional dendritic cells as well as myeloid cells. These findings suggest a positive correlation between CD10 density and degree of differentiation. Although freshly isolated CD34(+) CD10(Hi) cells were in cycle, those from CB or BM expanded poorly in culture, suggesting regulators of populations remain to be discovered. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE:Steps in human B lymphopoiesis have not been sufficiently studied, and we now show that increased CD10 expression corresponds to differentiation potential and stage. CD34(+) CD10(Hi) progenitors are obviously in the B lineage but may have progressed beyond the point where they can be expanded in culture.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2944886?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Michiko Ichii
Kenji Oritani
Takafumi Yokota
Qingzhao Zhang
Karla P Garrett
Yuzuru Kanakura
Paul W Kincade
spellingShingle Michiko Ichii
Kenji Oritani
Takafumi Yokota
Qingzhao Zhang
Karla P Garrett
Yuzuru Kanakura
Paul W Kincade
The density of CD10 corresponds to commitment and progression in the human B lymphoid lineage.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Michiko Ichii
Kenji Oritani
Takafumi Yokota
Qingzhao Zhang
Karla P Garrett
Yuzuru Kanakura
Paul W Kincade
author_sort Michiko Ichii
title The density of CD10 corresponds to commitment and progression in the human B lymphoid lineage.
title_short The density of CD10 corresponds to commitment and progression in the human B lymphoid lineage.
title_full The density of CD10 corresponds to commitment and progression in the human B lymphoid lineage.
title_fullStr The density of CD10 corresponds to commitment and progression in the human B lymphoid lineage.
title_full_unstemmed The density of CD10 corresponds to commitment and progression in the human B lymphoid lineage.
title_sort density of cd10 corresponds to commitment and progression in the human b lymphoid lineage.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2010-09-01
description BACKGROUND:Requirements for human B lymphopoiesis are still poorly understood, and that has hampered investigation of differentiation events. For example, there are few cell surface antigens that can be used as milestones of lineage progression. The CD10 ectoenzyme is one such marker and has been used to define CLP, but we found substantial tissue specific variations in CD10 levels, and there was no information about how that corresponded to differentiation options. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS:The aim of the present study was to use recently developed culture methods to assess the nature and differentiation potential of progenitors sorted according to CD10 density from umbilical cord blood (CB), adult bone marrow (BM) or G-CSF mobilized peripheral blood (PB). Many CD34(+) cells in BM express high levels of CD10, while low or low/negative CD10 densities were found on CD34(+) cells in CB or G-CSF mobilized PB, respectively. The relative abundance of CD10(Lo) versus CD10(Hi) cells only accounts for some CB versus BM differences. Almost all of the CD34(+) CD10(Hi) cells expressed CD19 and lymphocyte transcription factors and corresponded to loss of myeloid potential. A high degree of immunoglobulin D(H)-J(H) gene rearrangements was characteristic only of the CD10(Hi) subset. In contrast, the CD34(+) CD10(Lo) progenitors efficiently produced plasmacytoid and conventional dendritic cells as well as myeloid cells. These findings suggest a positive correlation between CD10 density and degree of differentiation. Although freshly isolated CD34(+) CD10(Hi) cells were in cycle, those from CB or BM expanded poorly in culture, suggesting regulators of populations remain to be discovered. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE:Steps in human B lymphopoiesis have not been sufficiently studied, and we now show that increased CD10 expression corresponds to differentiation potential and stage. CD34(+) CD10(Hi) progenitors are obviously in the B lineage but may have progressed beyond the point where they can be expanded in culture.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2944886?pdf=render
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