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Dive into the research topics where Eric Lagasse is active.

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Featured researches published by Eric Lagasse.


Nature Medicine | 2000

Purified hematopoietic stem cells can differentiate into hepatocytes in vivo

Eric Lagasse; Heather Connors; Muhsen Al-Dhalimy; Michael J. Reitsma; Monika Dohse; Linda Osborne; Xin Wang; Milton J. Finegold; Irving L. Weissman; Markus Grompe

The characterization of hepatic progenitor cells is of great scientific and clinical interest. Here we report that intravenous injection of adult bone marrow cells in the FAH−/− mouse, an animal model of tyrosinemia type I, rescued the mouse and restored the biochemical function of its liver. Moreover, within bone marrow, only rigorously purified hematopoietic stem cells gave rise to donor-derived hematopoietic and hepatic regeneration. This result seems to contradict the conventional assumptions of the germ layer origins of tissues such as the liver, and raises the question of whether the cells of the hematopoietic stem cell phenotype are pluripotent hematopoietic cells that retain the ability to transdifferentiate, or whether they are more primitive multipotent cells.


Nature | 2003

Cell fusion is the principal source of bone-marrow-derived hepatocytes.

Xin Wang; Holger Willenbring; Yassmine Akkari; Yumi Torimaru; Mark Foster; Muhsen Al-Dhalimy; Eric Lagasse; Milton J. Finegold; Susan B. Olson; Markus Grompe

Evidence suggests that haematopoietic stem cells might have unexpected developmental plasticity, highlighting therapeutic potential. For example, bone-marrow-derived hepatocytes can repopulate the liver of mice with fumarylacetoacetate hydrolase deficiency and correct their liver disease. To determine the underlying mechanism in this murine model, we performed serial transplantation of bone-marrow-derived hepatocytes. Here we show by Southern blot analysis that the repopulating hepatocytes in the liver were heterozygous for alleles unique to the donor marrow, in contrast to the original homozygous donor cells. Furthermore, cytogenetic analysis of hepatocytes transplanted from female donor mice into male recipients demonstrated 80,XXXY (diploid to diploid fusion) and 120,XXXXYY (diploid to tetraploid fusion) karyotypes, indicative of fusion between donor and host cells. We conclude that hepatocytes derived form bone marrow arise from cell fusion and not by differentiation of haematopoietic stem cells.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2001

AML1-ETO expression is directly involved in the development of acute myeloid leukemia in the presence of additional mutations.

Youzhong Yuan; Liming Zhou; Toshihiro Miyamoto; Hiromi Iwasaki; Nari Harakawa; Christopher J. Hetherington; Sebastien A. Burel; Eric Lagasse; Irving L. Weissman; Koichi Akashi; Dong-Er Zhang

The t(8;21) is one of the most frequent chromosomal abnormalities associated with acute myeloid leukemia (AML). The translocation, which involves the AML1 gene on chromosome 21 and the ETO gene on chromosome 8, generates an AML1-ETO fusion transcription factor. To examine the effect of the AML1-ETO fusion protein on leukemogenesis, we made transgenic mice in which expression of AML1-ETO is under the control of the human MRP8 promoter (hMRP8-AML1-ETO). AML1-ETO is specifically expressed in myeloid cells, including common myeloid progenitors of hMRP8-AML1-ETO transgenic mice. The transgenic mice were healthy during their life spans, suggesting that AML1-ETO alone is not sufficient for leukemogenesis. However, after treatment of newborn hMRP8-AML1-ETO transgenic mice and their wild-type littermates with a strong DNA-alkylating mutagen, N-ethyl-N-nitrosourea, 55% of transgenic mice developed AML and the other 45% of transgenic mice and all of the wild-type littermates developed acute T lymphoblastic leukemia. Our results provide direct evidence that AML1-ETO is critical for causing myeloid leukemia, but one or more additional mutations are required for leukemogenesis. The hMRP8-AML1-ETO-transgenic mice provide an excellent model that can be used to isolate additional genetic events and to further understand the molecular pathogenesis of AML1-ETO-related leukemia.


American Journal of Pathology | 2002

Kinetics of Liver Repopulation after Bone Marrow Transplantation

Xin Wang; Eugenio Montini; Muhsen Al-Dhalimy; Eric Lagasse; Milton J. Finegold; Markus Grompe

Recent work has convincingly demonstrated that adult bone marrow contains cells capable of differentiating into liver epithelial cells in vivo. However, the frequency and time course with which fully functional hepatocytes emerge after bone marrow transplantation remained controversial. Here, we used the fumarylacetoacetate hydrolase knockout mouse to determine the kinetics of hepatocyte replacement after complete hematopoietic reconstitution. Single donor-derived hepatocytes were first detected 7 weeks after lethal irradiation and bone marrow transplantation. Liver disease was not required for this transdifferentiation. In the presence of selective pressure the single cells evolved into hepatocyte nodules by 11 weeks after transplantation and resulted in >30% overall liver repopulation by 22 weeks. The frequency with which hepatocytes were produced was between 10(-4) and 10(-6), resulting in only 50 to 500 repopulation events per liver. Hepatic engraftment was not observed without previous hematopoietic reconstitution even in the presence of liver injury. In addition, significant liver repopulation was completely dependent on hepatocyte growth selection. We conclude that hepatocyte replacement by bone marrow cells is a slow and rare event. Significant improvements in the efficiency of this process will be needed before clinical success can be expected.


Tissue Engineering Part C-methods | 2011

A Whole-Organ Regenerative Medicine Approach for Liver Replacement

Alejandro Soto-Gutierrez; Li Zhang; Chris Medberry; Ken Fukumitsu; Denver M. Faulk; Hongbin Jiang; Janet E. Reing; Roberto Gramignoli; Junji Komori; Mark A. Ross; Masaki Nagaya; Eric Lagasse; Donna B. Stolz; Stephen C. Strom; Ira J. Fox; Stephen F. Badylak

BACKGROUND & AIMS The therapy of choice for end-stage liver disease is whole-organ liver transplantation, but this option is limited by a shortage of donor organs. Cell-based therapies and hepatic tissue engineering have been considered as alternatives to liver transplantation, but neither has proven effective to date. A regenerative medicine approach for liver replacement has recently been described that includes the use of a three-dimensional organ scaffold prepared by decellularization of xenogeneic liver. The present study investigates a new, minimally disruptive method for whole-organ liver decellularization and three different cell reseeding strategies to engineer functional liver tissue. METHODS A combination of enzymatic, detergent, and mechanical methods are used to remove all cells from isolated rat livers. Whole-organ perfusion is used in a customized organ chamber and the decellularized livers are examined by morphologic, biochemical, and immunolabeling techniques for preservation of the native matrix architecture and composition. Three different methods for hepatocyte seeding of the resultant three-dimensional liver scaffolds are evaluated to maximize cell survival and function: (1) direct parenchymal injection, (2) multistep infusion, or (3) continuous perfusion. RESULTS The decellularization process preserves the three-dimensional macrostructure, the ultrastructure, the composition of the extracellular matrix components, the native microvascular network of the liver, and the bile drainage system, and up to 50% of growth factor content. The three-dimensional liver matrix reseeded with the multistep infusion of hepatocytes generated ∼90% of cell engraftment and supported liver-specific functional capacities of the engrafted cells, including albumin production, urea metabolism, and cytochrome P450 induction. CONCLUSIONS Whole-organ liver decellularization is possible with maintenance of structure and composition suitable to support functional hepatocytes.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2003

Expression of BCR/ABL and BCL-2 in myeloid progenitors leads to myeloid leukemias.

Siddhartha Jaiswal; David Traver; Toshihiro Miyamoto; Koichi Akashi; Eric Lagasse; Irving L. Weissman

Chronic myelogenous leukemia is a myeloproliferative disorder (MPD) that, over time, progresses to acute leukemia. Both processes are closely associated with the t(9;22) chromosomal translocation that creates the BCR/ABL fusion gene in hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) and their progeny. Chronic myelogenous leukemia is therefore classified as an HSC disorder in which a clone of multipotent HSCs is likely to be malignantly transformed, although direct evidence for malignant t(9;22)+ HSCs is lacking. To test whether HSC malignancy is required, we generated hMRP8p210BCR/ABL transgenic mice in which expression of BCR/ABL is absent in HSCs and targeted exclusively to myeloid progenitors and their myelomonocytic progeny. Four of 13 BCR/ABL transgenic founders developed a chronic MPD, but only one progressed to blast crisis. To address whether additional oncogenic events are required for progression to acute disease, we crossed hMRP8p210BCR/ABL mice to apoptosis-resistant hMRP8BCL-2 mice. Of 18 double-transgenic animals, 9 developed acute myeloid leukemias that were transplantable to wild-type recipients. Taken together, these data indicate that a MPD can arise in mice without expression of BCR/ABL in HSCs and that additional mutations inhibiting programmed cell death may be critical in the transition of this disease to blast-crisis leukemia.


American Journal of Pathology | 2001

Liver Repopulation and Correction of Metabolic Liver Disease by Transplanted Adult Mouse Pancreatic Cells

Xin Wang; Muhsen Al-Dhalimy; Eric Lagasse; Milton J. Finegold; Markus Grompe

The emergence of cells with hepatocellular properties in the adult pancreas has been described in several experimental models. To determine whether adult pancreas contains cells that can give rise to therapeutically useful and biochemically normal hepatocytes, we transplanted suspensions of wild-type mouse pancreatic cells into syngeneic recipients deficient in fumarylacetoacetate hydrolase and manifesting tyrosinemia. Four of 34 (12%) mutant mice analyzed were fully rescued by donor-derived cells and had normal liver function. Ten additional mice (29%) showed histological evidence of donor-derived hepatocytes in the liver. Previous work has suggested that pancreatic liver precursors reside within or close to pancreatic ducts. We therefore performed additional transplantations using either primary cell suspensions enriched for ducts or cultured ducts. Forty-four mutant mice were transplanted with cells enriched for pancreatic duct cells, but only three of the 34 (9%) recipients analyzed displayed donor-derived hepatocytes. In addition, 28 of the fumarylacetoacetate hydrolase-deficient mice were transplanted with cultured pancreatic duct cells, but no donor-derived hepatocytes were observed. Our results demonstrate for the first time that adult mouse pancreas contains hepatocyte progenitor cells capable of significant therapeutic liver reconstitution. However, contrary to previous reports, we were unable to detect these cells within the duct compartment.


Cancer Research | 2008

A Stochastic Model for Cancer Stem Cell Origin in Metastatic Colon Cancer

Christine Odoux; Helene Fohrer; Toshitaka Hoppo; Lynda Guzik; Donna B. Stolz; Dale W. Lewis; Susanne M. Gollin; T. Clark Gamblin; David A. Geller; Eric Lagasse

Human cancers have been found to include transformed stem cells that may drive cancer progression to metastasis. Here, we report that metastatic colon cancer contains clonally derived tumor cells with all of the critical properties expected of stem cells, including self-renewal and the ability to differentiate into mature colon cells. Additionally, when injected into mice, these cells initiated tumors that closely resemble human cancer. Karyotype analyses of parental and clonally derived tumor cells expressed many consistent (clonal) along with unique chromosomal aberrations, suggesting the presence of chromosomal instability in the cancer stem cells. Thus, this new model for cancer origin and metastatic progression includes features of both the hierarchical model for cancerous stem cells and the stochastic model, driven by the observation of chromosomal instability.


Stem Cells | 2009

Prospective Isolation of Bronchiolar Stem Cells Based Upon Immunophenotypic and Autofluorescence Characteristics

Roxana M. Teisanu; Eric Lagasse; John F. Whitesides; Barry R. Stripp

Bronchiolar stem cells have been functionally defined in vivo on the basis of their resistance to chemical (naphthalene) injury, their infrequent proliferation relative to other progenitor cell types, and their coexpression of the airway and alveolar secretory cell markers Clara cell secretory protein and pro‐surfactant protein C, respectively. Cell surface markers that have previously been used for their prospective isolation included Sca‐1 and CD34. Using transgenic animal models associated with stem cell expansion, ablation, and lineage tracing, we demonstrate that CD34pos cells do not belong to the airway epithelial lineage and that cell surface Sca‐1 immunoreactivity does not distinguish between bronchiolar stem and facultative transit‐amplifying (Clara) cell populations. Furthermore, we show that high autofluorescence (AFhigh) is a distinguishing characteristic of Clara cells allowing for the fractionation of AFlow bronchiolar stem cells. On the basis of these data we show that the defining phenotype of the bronchiolar stem cell is CD45neg CD31neg CD34neg Sca‐llow AFlow. This refinement in the definition of bronchiolar stem cells provides a critical tool by which to assess functional and molecular distinctions between bronchiolar stem cells and the more abundant pool of facultative transit‐amplifying (Clara) cells. STEM CELLS 2009;27:612–622


Mechanisms of Development | 2003

Hepatic regeneration from hematopoietic stem cells

Eric Lagasse; Irving L. Weissman

In recent years, numerous investigators have reported novel cellular fates of multipotent stem or progenitor cells. In this review, we discuss the unexpected observations that hematopoietic stem cells can contribute to the hepatocyte lineage in humans and in rodent models of liver disease and regeneration. A key unresolved issue regarding hepatic regeneration from hematopoietic stem cells is whether the mechanism occurs through transdetermination, cell fusion, or other processes. A better understanding of the various stem or progenitor cells of the hepatic lineage may facilitate cellular transplantation approaches for the correction of hepatic function in patients with end-stage liver disease.

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Donna B. Stolz

University of Pittsburgh

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Junji Komori

University of Pittsburgh

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Rohan Manohar

University of Pittsburgh

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Xin Wang

University of Toronto

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