To understand the precise disease driving mechanisms in acute myeloid leukemia (AML), comparison of patient matched hematopoietic stem cells (HSC) and leukemia stem cells (LSC) is essential. In this analysis, we have examined the value of aldehyde dehydrogenase (ALDH) activity in combination with CD34 expression for the separation of HSC from LSC in 104 patients with de novo AML. The majority of AML patients (80 out of 104) had low percentages of cells with high ALDH activity (ALDH+ cells; <1.9%; ALDH‐rare AML), whereas 24 patients had relatively numerous ALDH+ cells (≥1.9%; ALDH‐numerous AML). In patients with ALDH‐rare AML, normal HSC could be separated by their CD34+ALDH+ phenotype, whereas LSC were exclusively detected among CD34+ALDH− cells. For patients with ALDH‐numerous AML, the CD34+ALDH+ subset consisted mainly of LSC and separation from HSC was not feasible. Functional analyses further showed that ALDH+ cells from ALDH‐numerous AML were quiescent, refractory to ARA‐C treatment and capable of leukemic engraftment in a xenogenic mouse transplantation model. Clinically, resistance to chemotherapy and poor long‐term outcome were also characteristic for patients with ALDH‐numerous AML providing an additional risk‐stratification tool. The difference in spectrum and relevance of ALDH activity in the putative LSC populations demonstrates, in addition to phenotypic and genetic, also functional heterogeneity of leukemic cells and suggests divergent roles for ALDH activity in normal HSC versus LSC. By acknowledging these differences our study provides a new and useful tool for prospective identification of AML cases in which separation of HSC from LSC is possible.
In patients with acute myeloid leukemia and low percentages of aldehyde-dehydrogenase-positive cells, non-leukemic hematopoietic stem cells can be separated from leukemic cells. By relating hematopoietic stem cell frequencies to outcome we detected poor overall- and disease-free survival of patients with low hematopoietic stem cell frequencies. Serial analysis of matched diagnostic and follow-up samples further demonstrated that hematopoietic stem cells increased after chemotherapy in patients who achieved durable remissions. However, in patients who eventually relapsed, hematopoietic stem cell numbers decreased dramatically at the time of molecular relapse demonstrating that hematopoietic stem cell levels represent an indirect marker of minimal residual disease, which heralds leukemic relapse. Upon transplantation in immune-deficient mice cases with low percentages of hematopoietic stem cells of our cohort gave rise to leukemic or no engraftment, whereas cases with normal hematopoietic stem cell levels mostly resulted in multi-lineage engraftment. Based on our experimental data, we propose that leukemic stem cells have increased niche affinity in cases with low percentages of hematopoietic stem cells. To validate this hypothesis, we developed new mathematical models describing the dynamics of healthy and leukemic cells under different regulatory scenarios. These models suggest that the mechanism leading to decreases in hematopoietic stem cell frequencies before leukemic relapse must be based on expansion of leukemic stem cells with high niche affinity and the ability to dislodge hematopoietic stem cells. Thus, our data suggest that decreasing numbers of hematopoietic stem cells indicate leukemic stem cell persistence and the emergence of leukemic relapse.
Mounting evidences indicate that leukemic cells in patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) are derived from leukemia stem cells (LSC). In analogy to normal hematopoietic stem cells (HSC), LSC remain mostly dormant and are hence resistant to conventional chemotherapy. Residual, physiological HSC exist alongside with LSC, with heterogeneous dominance of LSC over HSC in individual patients. We have devised a flow cytometric method for the identification and separation of these two stem cell populations based on surface antigen markers such as CD34, CD38, lineage aberrant markers, and aldehyde dehydrogenase (ALDH) enzyme activity.
Separation of leukemic stem cells (LSC) and residual hematopoietic stem cells (HSC) from the same individual patient with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is essential for a proper understanding of the leukemic driving mechanisms. We have studied the role of aldehyde dehydrogenase (ALDH) for this purpose and have defined the functional properties of ALDHbright cells in specific subgroups of AML. We have examined the ALDH activity by flow cytometry in bone marrow samples (BM) from 14 healthy donors and 73 patients with de novo AML. The median frequency of cells with high ALDH activity (ALDHbright cells) in the healthy subjects was 1.92% with a range from 0.58 to 3.16%. For patients with AML, the median number of ALDHbright cells was 0.25% with a broad range from 0.004 to 33.57%. Whereas the majority of patients with AML (n = 56) had low frequencies of ALDHbright cells (median 0.11%; range 0.004 – 1.77%; defined as ALDH-low AML), 17 patients had relatively numerous ALDHbright cells (median 9.01; range 3.54 – 33.57%; defined as ALDH-numerous AML). In both groups, ALDHbright cell populations were highly enriched for CD34+CD38- cells. The ALDHbright cells derived from ALDH-low AML did not contain chromosomal and molecular aberrations characteristic of the original leukemia, and were able to induce multi-lineage hematopoiesis in NSG mouse models. Thus, genetically and functionally normal HSC could be successfully isolated in the ALDHbright subset, whereas LSC were enriched in ALDHdimCD34+CD38- subset for patients with ALDH-low AML. For 17 patients with ALDH-numerous AML, the ALDHbright subset was consistently contaminated with LSC. In clinical follow-ups, patients with ALDH-numerous AML showed resistance to induction chemotherapy and were characterized by a very poor long-term outcome that was comparable to patients with high-risk cytogenetic or molecular genetic markers. In four patients with ALDH-numerous AML we demonstrated that the ALDHbrightCD34+CD38- subset contained chemotherapy-resistant clones with repopulating ability. Furthermore, such ALDHbright cells were characterized by a lower cell-cycle activity and an increased resistance to cytarabine in comparison with ALDHdim blasts in in vitro assays. Our data have provided evidence that LSC and residual HSC can be separated using ALDH in patients with low frequencies of ALDHbright cells. In patients with ALDH-numerous AML, the ALDHbright subset is associated with leukemic features both in vitro and in animal models. Thus our data demonstrated the feasibility of appropriate comparisons of LSC versus HSC from the same patient with specific subtypes of AML and the impact of LSC properties on clinical outcome. Disclosures: Buss: Novartis: Travel support Other; Micromet/Amgen: Reimbursements for participation in a clinical study , Reimbursements for participation in a clinical study Other. Ho:Sanofi-Aventis: Consultancy, Honoraria, Membership on an entity’s Board of Directors or advisory committees; Genzyme: Consultancy, Honoraria, Membership on an entity’s Board of Directors or advisory committees.
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