Claudia Benz
BC Cancer Agency
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Publication
Featured researches published by Claudia Benz.
Blood | 2009
David G. Kent; Michael R. Copley; Claudia Benz; Stefan Wöhrer; Brad Dykstra; Elaine Ma; Jay Cheyne; Yongjun Zhao; Michelle Bowie; Maura Gasparetto; Allen Delaney; Clayton A. Smith; Marco A. Marra; Connie J. Eaves
Hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) are generally defined by their dual properties of pluripotency and extensive self-renewal capacity. However, a lack of experimental clarity as to what constitutes extensive self-renewal capacity coupled with an absence of methods to prospectively isolate long-term repopulating cells with defined self-renewal activities has made it difficult to identify the essential components of the self-renewal machinery and investigate their regulation. We now show that cells capable of repopulating irradiated congenic hosts for 4 months and producing clones of cells that can be serially transplanted are selectively and highly enriched in the CD150(+) subset of the EPCR(+)CD48(-)CD45(+) fraction of mouse fetal liver and adult bone marrow cells. In contrast, cells that repopulate primary hosts for the same period but show more limited self-renewal activity are enriched in the CD150(-) subset. Comparative transcriptome analyses of these 2 subsets with each other and with HSCs whose self-renewal activity has been rapidly extinguished in vitro revealed 3 new genes (VWF, Rhob, Pld3) whose elevated expression is a consistent and selective feature of the long-term repopulating cells with durable self-renewal capacity. These findings establish the identity of a phenotypically and molecularly distinct class of pluripotent hematopoietic cells with lifelong self-renewal capacity.
Nature Cell Biology | 2013
Michael R. Copley; Sonja Babovic; Claudia Benz; David J.H.F. Knapp; Philip A. Beer; David G. Kent; Stefan Wöhrer; David Treloar; Christopher Day; Keegan Rowe; Heidi Mader; Florian Kuchenbauer; R. Keith Humphries; Connie J. Eaves
Mouse haematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) undergo a postnatal transition in several properties, including a marked reduction in their self-renewal activity. We now show that the developmentally timed change in this key function of HSCs is associated with their decreased expression of Lin28b and an accompanying increase in their let-7 microRNA levels. Lentivirus-mediated overexpression of Lin28 in adult HSCs elevates their self-renewal activity in transplanted irradiated hosts, as does overexpression of Hmga2, a well-established let-7 target that is upregulated in fetal HSCs. Conversely, HSCs from fetal Hmga2−/− mice do not exhibit the heightened self-renewal activity that is characteristic of wild-type fetal HSCs. Interestingly, overexpression of Hmga2 in adult HSCs does not mimic the ability of elevated Lin28 to activate a fetal lymphoid differentiation program. Thus, Lin28b may act as a master regulator of developmentally timed changes in HSC programs with Hmga2 serving as its specific downstream modulator of HSC self-renewal potential.
Cell Stem Cell | 2012
Claudia Benz; Michael R. Copley; David G. Kent; Stefan Wohrer; Adrian Cortes; Nima Aghaeepour; Elaine Ma; Heidi Mader; Keegan Rowe; Christopher Day; David Treloar; Ryan R. Brinkman; Connie J. Eaves
Adult hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) with serially transplantable activity comprise two subtypes. One shows a balanced output of mature lymphoid and myeloid cells; the other appears selectively lymphoid deficient. We now show that both of these HSC subtypes are present in the fetal liver (at a 1:10 ratio) with the rarer, lymphoid-deficient HSCs immediately gaining an increased representation in the fetal bone marrow, suggesting that the marrow niche plays a key role in regulating their ensuing preferential amplification. Clonal analysis of HSC expansion posttransplant showed that both subtypes display an extensive but variable self-renewal activity with occasional interconversion. Clonal analysis of their differentiation programs demonstrated functional and molecular as well as quantitative HSC subtype-specific differences in the lymphoid progenitors they generate but an indistinguishable production of multipotent and myeloid-restricted progenitors. These findings establish a level of heterogeneity in HSC differentiation and expansion control that may have relevance to stem cell populations in other hierarchically organized tissues.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010
Oleh Petriv; Florian Kuchenbauer; Allen Delaney; Véronique Lecault; Adam K. White; David G. Kent; L. Marmolejo; Michael Heuser; Tobias Berg; Michael R. Copley; Jens Ruschmann; Sanja Sekulovic; Claudia Benz; E. Kuroda; V. Ho; Frann Antignano; Timotheus Y.F. Halim; Vincenzo Giambra; Gerald Krystal; C. J. F. Takei; Andrew P. Weng; James M. Piret; Connie J. Eaves; Marco A. Marra; R K Humphries; Carl L. Hansen
The hematopoietic system produces a large number of highly specialized cell types that are derived through a hierarchical differentiation process from a common stem cell population. miRNAs are critical players in orchestrating this differentiation. Here, we report the development and application of a high-throughput microfluidic real-time quantitative PCR (RT-qPCR) approach for generating global miRNA profiles for 27 phenotypically distinct cell populations isolated from normal adult mouse hematopoietic tissues. A total of 80,000 RT-qPCR assays were used to map the landscape of miRNA expression across the hematopoietic hierarchy, including rare progenitor and stem cell populations. We show that miRNA profiles allow for the direct inference of cell lineage relations and functional similarity. Our analysis reveals a close relatedness of the miRNA expression patterns in multipotent progenitors and stem cells, followed by a major reprogramming upon restriction of differentiation potential to a single lineage. The analysis of miRNA expression in single hematopoietic cells further demonstrates that miRNA expression is very tightly regulated within highly purified populations, underscoring the potential of single-cell miRNA profiling for assessing compartment heterogeneity.
Clinical Cancer Research | 2008
David G. Kent; Michael R. Copley; Claudia Benz; Brad Dykstra; Michelle Bowie; Connie J. Eaves
Understanding the intrinsic pathways that regulate hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) proliferation and self-renewal responses to external signals offers a rational approach to developing improved strategies for HSC expansion for therapeutic applications. Such studies are also likely to reveal new targets for the treatment of human myeloid malignancies because perturbations of the biological processes that control normal HSC self-renewal divisions are believed to drive the propagation of many of these diseases. Here, we review recent findings that point to the importance of using stringent functional criteria to define HSCs as cells with longterm repopulating activity and evidence that activation of the KIT receptor and many downstream effectors serve as major regulators of changing HSC proliferative and self-renewal behavior during development.
Cell Reports | 2014
Stefan Wöhrer; David J.H.F. Knapp; Michael R. Copley; Claudia Benz; David G. Kent; Keegan Rowe; Sonja Babovic; Heidi Mader; Robert A.J. Oostendorp; Connie J. Eaves
Summary Hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) are identified by their ability to sustain prolonged blood cell production in vivo, although recent evidence suggests that durable self-renewal (DSR) is shared by HSC subtypes with distinct self-perpetuating differentiation programs. Net expansions of DSR-HSCs occur in vivo, but molecularly defined conditions that support similar responses in vitro are lacking. We hypothesized that this might require a combination of factors that differentially promote HSC viability, proliferation, and self-renewal. We now demonstrate that HSC survival and maintenance of DSR potential are variably supported by different Steel factor (SF)-containing cocktails with similar HSC-mitogenic activities. In addition, stromal cells produce other factors, including nerve growth factor and collagen 1, that can antagonize the apoptosis of initially quiescent adult HSCs and, in combination with SF and interleukin-11, produce >15-fold net expansions of DSR-HSCs ex vivo within 7 days. These findings point to the molecular basis of HSC control and expansion.
Blood | 2011
Michael R. Copley; David G. Kent; Claudia Benz; Stefan Wöhrer; Keegan Rowe; Christopher Day; Connie J. Eaves
Archive | 2012
Claudia Benz; Michael R. Copley; David G Kent; Stefan Wohrer; Adrian Cortes; Nima Aghaeepour; Elaine Ma; Heidi Mader; Keegan Rowe; Christopher Day
Blood | 2012
Vincenzo Giambra; Sonya H. Lam; Amy Ng; Claudia Benz; Olena O Shevchuk; Connie J. Eaves; Andrew P. Weng
Blood | 2011
Claudia Benz; Michael R. Copley; David G. Kent; Stefan Wöhrer; Connie J. Eaves