Content area

Abstract

The concept of hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) niche was formulated in 1978, but HSC niches remained unidentified for the following two decades largely owing to technical limitations. Sophisticated live microscopy techniques and genetic manipulations have identified the endosteal region of the bone marrow (BM) as a preferential site of residence for the most potent HSC - able to reconstitute in serial transplants - with osteoblasts and their progenitors as critical cellular elements of these endosteal niches. This article reviews the path to the discovery of these endosteal niches (often called 'osteoblastic' niches) for HSC, what cell types contribute to these niches with their known physical and biochemical features. In the past decade, a first wave of research uncovered many mechanisms responsible for HSC homing to, and mobilization from, the whole BM tissue. However, the recent discovery of endosteal HSC niches has initiated a second wave of research focusing on the mechanisms by which most primitive HSC lodge into and migrate out of their endosteal niches. The second part of this article reviews the current knowledge of the mechanisms of HSC lodgment into, retention in and mobilization from osteoblastic niches.

Details

Title
The endosteal 'osteoblastic' niche and its role in hematopoietic stem cell homing and mobilization
Author
Lévesque, J-p; Helwani, F M; Winkler, I G
Pages
1979-92
Publication year
2010
Publication date
Dec 2010
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
ISSN
08876924
e-ISSN
14765551
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
817657694
Copyright
Copyright Nature Publishing Group Dec 2010