Therapeutic targeting and rapid mobilization of endosteal HSC using a small molecule integrin antagonist

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Abstract

The inherent disadvantages of using granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF) for hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) mobilization have driven efforts to identify alternate strategies based on single doses of small molecules. Here, we show targeting α9 β1 /α4 β1 integrins with a single dose of a small molecule antagonist (BOP (N-(benzenesulfonyl)-L-prolyl-L-O-(1-pyrrolidinylcarbonyl)tyrosine)) rapidly mobilizes long-term multi-lineage reconstituting HSC. Synergistic engraftment augmentation is observed when BOP is co-administered with AMD3100. Impressively, HSC in equal volumes of peripheral blood (PB) mobilized with this combination effectively out-competes PB mobilized with G-CSF. The enhanced mobilization observed using BOP and AMD3100 is recapitulated in a humanized NODSCIDIL2Rγ-/- model, demonstrated by a significant increase in PB CD34+ cells. Using a related fluorescent analogue of BOP (R-BC154), we show that this class of antagonists preferentially bind human and mouse HSC and progenitors via endogenously primed/activated α9 β 1 /α 4 β 1 within the endosteal niche. These results support using dual α9 β 1 /α 4 β 1 inhibitors as effective, rapid and transient mobilization agents with promising clinical applications.

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Cao, B., Zhang, Z., Grassinger, J., Williams, B., Heazlewood, C. K., Churches, Q. I., … Nilsson, S. K. (2016). Therapeutic targeting and rapid mobilization of endosteal HSC using a small molecule integrin antagonist. Nature Communications, 7. https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms11007

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