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Neurokinin-1 Receptor Signalling Impacts Bone Marrow Repopulation Efficiency

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2013

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Public Library of Science
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Berger, Alexandra, Catherine Frelin, Divya K. Shah, Patricia Benveniste, Robert Herrington, Norma P. Gerard, Juan-Carlos Zúñiga-Pflücker, Norman N. Iscove, and Christopher J. Paige. 2013. Neurokinin-1 receptor signalling impacts bone marrow repopulation efficiency. PLoS ONE 8(3): e58787.

Abstract

Tachykinins are a large group of neuropeptides with both central and peripheral activity. Despite the increasing number of studies reporting a growth supportive effect of tachykinin peptides in various in vitro stem cell systems, it remains unclear whether these findings are applicable in vivo. To determine how neurokinin-1 receptor (NK-1R) deficient hematopoietic stem cells would behave in a normal in vivo environment, we tested their reconstitution efficiency using competitive bone marrow repopulation assays. We show here that bone marrow taken from NK-1R deficient mice (Tacr1−/−) showed lineage specific B and T cell engraftment deficits compared to wild-type competitor bone marrow cells, providing evidence for an involvement of NK-1R signalling in adult hematopoiesis. Tachykinin knockout mice lacking the peptides SP and/or HK-1 (Tac1−/−, Tac4−/− and Tac1−/−/Tac4−/− mice) repopulated a lethally irradiated wild-type host with similar efficiency as competing wild-type bone marrow. The difference between peptide and receptor deficient mice indicates a paracrine and/or endocrine mechanism of action rather than autocrine signalling, as tachykinin peptides are supplied by the host environment.

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Biology, Biochemistry, Neurochemistry, Neurochemicals, Neuropeptides, Developmental Biology, Stem Cells, Hematopoietic Stem Cells, Model Organisms, Animal Models, Mouse, Molecular Cell Biology, Cellular Types, Hematopoietic Progenitor Cells, Medicine, Clinical Research Design, Animal Models of Disease

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