Stromal defects are part of the etiology of severe aplastic anemia (SAA), and hematopoietic engraftment is poor in unrelated and mismatched transplant. Therefore, we wanted to find out whether human mesenchymal stem cells (MSC) are partly of donor origin in patients with SAA years after successful bone marrow transplant (BMT). Three SAA patients 3, 5, and 8 years after BMT (cyclophosphamide, ATG) with bone marrow from an HLA-identical sibling donor of the opposite sex were investigated. MSC were grown from patients' bone marrow aspirates according to Caplan et al. The number of MSC that were isolated from SAA bone marrow post transplant was about 10 times lower than in normal controls. Primary cultures of adherent MSC and passage-one cells were analyzed by dual-color interphase fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) analysis using centromere-specific DNA probes for X and Y chromosome. FISH did not show any clear evidence of donor cells in the adherent MSC: In all cases, less than 0.5% of nuclei showed a donor-type signal pattern that is well within assay limits. In a female patient, the absence of male donor cells was confirmed by sensitive and quantitative, Y chromosome-specific TaqMan PCR (QYCS-PCR). In contrast, Ficoll-separated hematopoietic cells from the same aspirates were greater than 90% of donor origin, as expected. In SAA, as previously found in patients with lysosomal and peroxisomal storage disease, bone marrow MSC remain host-derived despite successful hematopoietic engraftment years after allogeneic BMT.
Karyotype investigations using classical cytogenetics, fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) and polymerase chain reaction (PCR) techniques were used for the characterization of Y chromosome structural anomalies found in two patients with ambiguous genitalia and features of Turner syndrome. Both exhibited mosaic karyotypes of peripheral blood lymphocytes.
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