Artículo
A proinflammatory stem cell niche drives myelofibrosis through a targetable galectin-1 axis
Li, Rong; Colombo, Michela; Wang, Guanlin; Rodriguez Romera, Antonio; Benlabiod, Camelia; Jooss, Natalie J.; O'Sullivan, Jennifer; Brierley, Charlotte K.; Clark, Sally Ann; Pérez Sáez, Juan Manuel
; Fernández, Pedro Aragón; Schoof, Erwin M.; Porse, Bo; Meng, Yiran; Khan, Abdullah O.; Wen, Sean; Dong, Pengwei; Zhou, Wenjiang; Sousos, Nikolaos; Murphy, Lauren; Clarke, Matthew; Olijnik, Aude Anais; Wong, Zoë C.; Karali, Christina Simoglou; Sirinukunwattana, Korsuk; Ryou, Hosuk; Norfo, Ruggiero; Cheng, Qian; Carrelha, Joana; Ren, Zemin; Thongjuea, Supat; Rathinam, Vijay A.; Krishnan, Anandi; Royston, Daniel; Rabinovich, Gabriel Adrián
; Mead, Adam J.; Psaila, Bethan


Fecha de publicación:
10/2024
Editorial:
American Association for the Advancement of Science
Revista:
Science Translational Medicine
ISSN:
1946-6242
Idioma:
Inglés
Tipo de recurso:
Artículo publicado
Clasificación temática:
Resumen
Myeloproliferative neoplasms are stem cell–driven cancers associated with a large burden of morbidity and mortality. Most patients present with early-stage disease, but a substantial proportion progress to myelofibrosis or secondary leukemia, advanced cancers with a poor prognosis and high symptom burden. Currently, it remains difficult to predict progression, and therapies that reliably prevent or reverse fibrosis are lacking. A major bottleneck to the discovery of disease-modifying therapies has been an incomplete understanding of the interplay between perturbed cellular and molecular states. Several cell types have individually been implicated, but a comprehensive analysis of myelofibrotic bone marrow is lacking. We therefore mapped the cross-talk between bone marrow cell types in myelofibrotic bone marrow. We found that inflammation and fibrosis are orchestrated by a “quartet” of immune and stromal cell lineages, with basophils and mast cells creating a TNF signaling hub, communicating with megakaryocytes, mesenchymal stromal cells, and proinflammatory fibroblasts. We identified the β-galactoside–binding protein galectin-1 as a biomarker of progression to myelofibrosis and poor survival in multiple patient cohorts and as a promising therapeutic target, with reduced myeloproliferation and fibrosis in vitro and in vivo and improved survival after galectin-1 inhibition. In human bone marrow organoids, TNF increased galectin-1 expression, suggesting a feedback loop wherein the proinflammatory myeloproliferative neoplasm clone creates a self-reinforcing niche, fueling progression to advanced disease. This study provides a resource for studying hematopoietic cell–niche interactions, with relevance for cancer-associated inflammation and disorders of tissue fibrosis.
Palabras clave:
MIELOFIBROSIS
,
GALECTIN-1
,
FIBROSIS
,
INFLAMMATION
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Articulos(IBYME)
Articulos de INST.DE BIOLOGIA Y MEDICINA EXPERIMENTAL (I)
Articulos de INST.DE BIOLOGIA Y MEDICINA EXPERIMENTAL (I)
Citación
Li, Rong; Colombo, Michela; Wang, Guanlin; Rodriguez Romera, Antonio; Benlabiod, Camelia; et al.; A proinflammatory stem cell niche drives myelofibrosis through a targetable galectin-1 axis; American Association for the Advancement of Science; Science Translational Medicine; 16; 768; 10-2024; 1-16
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