The regulatory mechanism of human early B- and T- lymphoid differentiation has not been well studied. Coculture on telomerized human bone marrow stromal cells supported the generation of CD7+CD45RA+ multipotent precursors with differentiation potential for T-, B-, NK-lineage, and monocytic cells, CD10+CD19-CD45RA+ B-biased precursors, and CD10+CD19+CD45RA+ proB cells from human CD34+lin- hematopoietic progenitors. CD7+CD45RA+ and CD10+CD19- lymphoid precursors can be developed from hematopoietic progenitors by soluble factors produced from stromal cells, but the generation of CD19+ proB cells was reduced. Replating analysis showed that direct contact with stromal cells promoted B-lineage differentiation toward CD19+ proB cells from CD34+lin- cell-derived CD7+CD45RA+ and CD10+CD19- lymphoid precursors.

SDF-1 is shown to be critical for B-lineage differentiation from studies of mice. SDF-1 was produced from the human telomerized stromal cells. Inhibition of binding to SDF-1 with neutralizing antibody against CXCR4 suppressed B-lineage differentiation to CD19+ proB cells from hematopoietic precursors, while the generation of CD7+CD45RA+ cells was not significantly affected. By replating analysis, anti-CXCR4 Ab inhibited the differentiation to CD19+ proB cells from CD7+CD45RA+ and CD10+CD19- lymphoid precursors on stromal cells.

These data indicate that direct contact with stromal cells in association with SDF-1 produced from stromal cells is important for B-lineage differentiation toward CD19+ proB cells from CD7+CD45RA+ and CD10+CD19- lymphoid precursors but dispensable for differentiation toward CD7+CD45RA+ multipotent lymphoid precursors.

Disclosures

No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.

Author notes

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Asterisk with author names denotes non-ASH members.

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