4.7 Article

Direct signal transduction via functional interferon-αβ receptors in CD34+ hematopoietic stem cells

Journal

LEUKEMIA
Volume 16, Issue 6, Pages 1135-1142

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/sj.leu.2402492

Keywords

interferon receptors; CD34(+) cells; anti-IFNAR1

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Affinity purified, freshly isolated CD34+ progenitors were shown to express low levels of type I interferon (IFN) receptors (740 +/- 60 binding sites/cell, K-d 0.7 +/- 0.04 nm) determined by Scatchard's analysis using a radiolabelled, neutralizing, monoclonal antibody directed against the IFNAR1 chain of the human type I IFN receptor. Treatment of freshly isolated (day 0), highly purified (>95% pure) CD34(+) cells with recombinant IFN-alpha resulted in rapid tyrosine phosphorylation and activation of STAT1, Tyk:2 and JAM as shown by Western immunoblotting. Similarly, IFN treatment was shown by confocal microscopy to result in rapid nuclear localization of the transcription factors IRF1 and STAT2, demonstrating the presence of functional IFN receptors on freshly isolated (day 0) CD34(+) cells. The number of specific type I IFN receptor binding sites expressed on hematopoietic progenitor cells increased to some 1440 +/- 40 per cell after 11 days of cultivation of CD34(+) cells in vitro suggesting that receptor expression increases with cell differentiation. IFN-mediated signal transduction and the inhibitory effect of IFN-alpha on 7 or 14 days CFU-GM and BFUE colony formation was abrogated in the presence of the anti-IFNAR1 mAb, indicating that IFN-alpha acts directly on the proliferation of human hematopoietic progenitor cells via receptor activated signal transduction without excluding the induction of other cytolkines or growth factors by residual accessory cells.

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