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Browsing by Author "Mishra, Akansha"
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Item Bmi1 maintains the self-renewal property of innate-like B lymphocytes(American Association of Immunologists, 2020-06-15) Kobayashi, Michihiro; Lin, Yang; Mishra, Akansha; Shelly, Chris; Gao, Rui; Reeh, Colton W; Wang, Paul Zhiping; Xi, Rongwen; Liu, Yunlong; Wenzel, Pamela; Ghosn, Eliver; Liu, Yan; Yoshimoto, Momoko; Pediatrics, School of MedicineThe self-renewal ability is a unique property of fetal-derived innate-like B-1a lymphocytes, which survive and function without being replenished by bone marrow (BM) progenitors. However, the mechanism by which IgM-secreting mature B-1a lymphocytes self-renew is poorly understood. In this study, we showed that Bmi1 was critically involved in this process. Although Bmi1 is considered essential for lymphopoiesis, the number of mature conventional B cells was not altered when Bmi1 was deleted in the B cell lineage. In contrast, the number of peritoneal B-1a cells was significantly reduced. Peritoneal cell transfer assays revealed diminished self-renewal ability of Bmi1-deleted B-1a cells, which was restored by additional deletion of Ink4-Arf, the well-known target of Bmi1 Fetal liver cells with B cell-specific Bmi1 deletion failed to repopulate peritoneal B-1a cells, but not other B-2 lymphocytes after transplantation assays, suggesting that Bmi1 may be involved in the developmental process of B-1 progenitors to mature B-1a cells. Although Bmi1 deletion has also been shown to alter the microenvironment for hematopoietic stem cells, fat-associated lymphoid clusters, the reported niche for B-1a cells, were not impaired in Bmi1 -/- mice. RNA expression profiling suggested lysine demethylase 5B (Kdm5b) as another possible target of Bmi1, which was elevated in Bmi1-/- B-1a cells in a stress setting and might repress B-1a cell proliferation. Our work has indicated that Bmi1 plays pivotal roles in self-renewal and maintenance of fetal-derived B-1a cells.Item Hemogenic Endothelial Cells Can Transition to Hematopoietic Stem Cells through a B-1 Lymphocyte-Biased State during Maturation in the Mouse Embryo(Elsevier, 2019-07-09) Kobayashi, Michihiro; Tarnawsky, Stefan P.; Wei, Haichao; Mishra, Akansha; Azevedo Portilho, Nathalia; Wenzel, Pamela; Davis, Brian; Wu, Jiaqian; Hadland, Brandon; Yoshimoto, Momoko; Pediatrics, IU School of MedicinePrecursors of hematopoietic stem cells (pre-HSCs) have been identified as intermediate precursors during the maturation process from hemogenic endothelial cells to HSCs in the aorta-gonad-mesonephros (AGM) region of the mouse embryo at embryonic day 10.5. Although pre-HSCs acquire an efficient adult-repopulating ability after ex vivo co-culture, their native hematopoietic capacity remains unknown. Here, we employed direct transplantation assays of CD45-VE-cadherin(VC)+KIT+(V+K+) cells (containing pre-HSCs) into immunodeficient neonatal mice that permit engraftment of embryonic hematopoietic precursors. We found that freshly isolated V+K+ cells exhibited significantly greater B-1 lymphocyte-biased repopulating capacity than multilineage repopulating capacity. Additionally, B cell colony-forming assays demonstrated the predominant B-1 progenitor colony-forming ability of these cells; however, increased B-2 progenitor colony-forming ability emerged after co-culture with Akt-expressing AGM endothelial cells, conditions that support pre-HSC maturation into HSCs. Our studies revealed an unexpected B-1 lymphocyte bias of the V+K+ population and acquisition of B-2 potential during commitment to the HSC fate.Item Long-Term Engraftment of ESC-Derived B-1 Progenitor Cells Supports HSC-Independent Lymphopoiesis(Elsevier, 2019-03-05) Lin, Yang; Kobayashi, Michihiro; Portilho, Nathalia Azevedo; Mishra, Akansha; Gao, Hongyu; Liu, Yunlong; Wenzel, Pamela; Davis, Brian; Yoder, Mervin C.; Yoshimoto, Momoko; Pediatrics, School of MedicineIt is generally considered that mouse embryonic stem cell (ESC) differentiation into blood cells in vitro recapitulates yolk sac (YS) hematopoiesis. As such, similar to YS-derived B-progenitors, we demonstrate here that ESC-derived B-progenitors differentiate into B-1 and marginal zone B cells, but not B-2 cells in immunodeficient mice after transplantation. ESC-derived B-1 cells were maintained in the recipients for more than 6 months, secreting natural IgM antibodies in vivo. Gene expression profiling displayed a close relationship between ESC- and YS-derived B-1 progenitors. Because there are no hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) detectable in our ESC differentiation culture, successful long-term engraftment of ESC-derived functional B-1 cells supports the presence of HSC-independent B-1 cell development.