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Dive into the research topics where Gudmundur L. Norddahl is active.

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Featured researches published by Gudmundur L. Norddahl.


Cell Stem Cell | 2007

Elucidation of the phenotypic, functional, and molecular topography of a myeloerythroid progenitor cell hierarchy

Cornelis J.H. Pronk; Derrick J. Rossi; Robert Månsson; Joanne L. Attema; Gudmundur L. Norddahl; Charles K. Chan; Mikael Sigvardsson; Irving L. Weissman; David Bryder

The major myeloid blood cell lineages are generated from hematopoietic stem cells by differentiation through a series of increasingly committed progenitor cells. Precise characterization of intermediate progenitors is important for understanding fundamental differentiation processes and a variety of disease states, including leukemia. Here, we evaluated the functional in vitro and in vivo potentials of a range of prospectively isolated myeloid precursors with differential expression of CD150, Endoglin, and CD41. Our studies revealed a hierarchy of myeloerythroid progenitors with distinct lineage potentials. The global gene expression signatures of these subsets were consistent with their functional capacities, and hierarchical clustering analysis suggested likely lineage relationships. These studies provide valuable tools for understanding myeloid lineage commitment, including isolation of an early erythroid-restricted precursor, and add to existing models of hematopoietic differentiation by suggesting that progenitors of the innate and adaptive immune system can separate late, following the divergence of megakaryocytic/erythroid potential.


Cell Stem Cell | 2011

Accumulating mitochondrial DNA mutations drive premature hematopoietic aging phenotypes distinct from physiological stem cell aging.

Gudmundur L. Norddahl; Cornelis J.H. Pronk; Martin Wahlestedt; Gerd Sten; Jens Martin Nygren; Amol Ugale; Mikael Sigvardsson; David Bryder

Somatic stem cells mediate tissue maintenance for the lifetime of an organism. Despite the well-established longevity that is a prerequisite for such function, accumulating data argue for compromised stem cell function with age. Identifying the mechanisms underlying age-dependent stem cell dysfunction is therefore key to understanding the aging process. Here, using a model carrying a proofreading-defective mitochondrial DNA polymerase, we demonstrate hematopoietic defects reminiscent of premature HSC aging, including anemia, lymphopenia, and myeloid lineage skewing. However, in contrast to physiological stem cell aging, rapidly accumulating mitochondrial DNA mutations had little functional effect on the hematopoietic stem cell pool, and instead caused distinct differentiation blocks and/or disappearance of downstream progenitors. These results show that intact mitochondrial function is required for appropriate multilineage stem cell differentiation, but argue against mitochondrial DNA mutations per se being a primary driver of somatic stem cell aging.


Oncogene | 2009

Hematopoietic stem cell ageing is uncoupled from p16(INK4A)-mediated senescence.

Joanne L. Attema; Cornelis J.H. Pronk; Gudmundur L. Norddahl; Jens Martin Nygren; David Bryder

Somatic stem cells are ultimately responsible for mediating appropriate organ homeostasis and have therefore been proposed to represent a cellular origin of the ageing process—a state often characterized by inappropriate homeostasis. Specifically, it has been suggested that ageing stem cells might succumb to replicative senescence by a mechanism involving the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor p16INK4A. Here, we tested multiple functional and molecular parameters indicative of p16INK4A activity in primary aged murine hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs). We found no evidence that replicative senescence accompanies stem cell ageing in vivo, and in line with p16INK4A being a critical determinant of such processes, most aged HSCs (>99%) failed to express p16INK4A at the mRNA level. Moreover, whereas loss of epigenetically guided repression of the INK4A/ARF locus accompanied replicative senescent murine embryonic fibroblasts, such repression was maintained in aged stem cells. Taken together, these studies indicate that increased senescence as mediated by the p16INK4A tumor suppressor has only a minor function as an intrinsic regulator of steady-state HSC ageing in vivo.


Blood | 2013

An epigenetic component of hematopoietic stem cell aging amenable to reprogramming into a young state.

Martin Wahlestedt; Gudmundur L. Norddahl; Gerd Sten; Amol Ugale; Mary-Ann Micha Frisk; Ragnar Mattsson; Tomas Deierborg; Mikael Sigvardsson; David Bryder

Aging of hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) leads to several functional changes, including alterations affecting self-renewal and differentiation. Although it is well established that many of the age-induced changes are intrinsic to HSCs, less is known regarding the stability of this state. Here, we entertained the hypothesis that HSC aging is driven by the acquisition of permanent genetic mutations. To examine this issue at a functional level in vivo, we applied induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cell reprogramming of aged hematopoietic progenitors and allowed the resulting aged-derived iPS cells to reform hematopoiesis via blastocyst complementation. Next, we functionally characterized iPS-derived HSCs in primary chimeras and after the transplantation of re-differentiated HSCs into new hosts, the gold standard to assess HSC function. Our data demonstrate remarkably similar functional properties of iPS-derived and endogenous blastocyst-derived HSCs, despite the extensive chronological and proliferative age of the former. Our results, therefore, favor a model in which an underlying, but reversible, epigenetic component is a hallmark of HSC aging.


Blood | 2016

GPR56 identifies primary human acute myeloid leukemia cells with high repopulating potential in vivo

Caroline Pabst; Anne Bergeron; Vincent-Philippe Lavallée; Jonathan Yeh; Patrick Gendron; Gudmundur L. Norddahl; Jana Krosl; Isabel Boivin; Eric Deneault; Jessica Simard; Suzan Imren; Geneviève Boucher; Kolja Eppert; Tobias Herold; Stefan K. Bohlander; Keith Humphries; Sébastien Lemieux; Josée Hébert; Guy Sauvageau; Frédéric Barabé

Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is a genetically heterogeneous hematologic malignancy, which is initiated and driven by a rare fraction of leukemia stem cells (LSCs). Despite the difficulties of identifying a common LSC phenotype, there is increasing evidence that high expression of stem cell gene signatures is associated with poor clinical outcome. Identification of functionally distinct subpopulations in this disease is therefore crucial to dissecting the molecular machinery underlying LSC self-renewal. Here, we combined next-generation sequencing technology with in vivo assessment of LSC frequencies and identified the adhesion G protein-coupled receptor 56 (GPR56) as a novel and stable marker for human LSCs for the majority of AML samples. High GPR56 expression was significantly associated with high-risk genetic subgroups and poor outcome. Analysis of GPR56 in combination with CD34 expression revealed engraftment potential of GPR56(+)cells in both the CD34(-)and CD34(+)fractions, thus defining a novel LSC compartment independent of the CD34(+)CD38(-)LSC phenotype.


Cell Reports | 2014

Hematopoietic Stem Cells Are Intrinsically Protected against MLL-ENL-Mediated Transformation.

Amol Ugale; Gudmundur L. Norddahl; Martin Wahlestedt; Petter Säwén; Pekka Jaako; Cornelis J.H. Pronk; Shamit Soneji; Jörg Cammenga; David Bryder

Studies of developmental pathways of hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) have defined lineage relationships throughout the blood system. This is relevant to acute myeloid leukemia (AML), where aggressiveness and therapeutic responsiveness can be influenced by the initial stage of transformation. To address this, we generated a mouse model in which the mixed-lineage leukemia/eleven-nineteen-leukemia (MLL-ENL) transcription factor can be conditionally activated in any cell type. We show that AML can originate from multiple hematopoietic progenitor subsets with granulocytic and monocytic potential, and that the normal developmental position of leukemia-initiating cells influences leukemic development. However, disease failed to arise from HSCs. Although it maintained or upregulated the expression of target genes associated with leukemic development, MLL-ENL dysregulated the proliferative and repopulating capacity of HSCs. Therefore, the permissiveness for development of AML may be associated with a narrower window of differentiation than was previously appreciated, and hijacking the self-renewal capacity of HSCs by a potent oncogene is insufficient for leukemic development.


Stem Cells | 2014

Somatic cells with a heavy mitochondrial DNA mutational load render induced pluripotent stem cells with distinct differentiation defects.

Martin Wahlestedt; Adam Ameur; Roksana Moraghebi; Gudmundur L. Norddahl; Gerd Sten; Niels-Bjarne Woods; David Bryder

It has become increasingly clear that several age‐associated pathologies associate with mutations in the mitochondrial genome. Experimental modeling of such events has revealed that acquisition of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) damage can impair respiratory function and, as a consequence, can lead to widespread decline in cellular function. This includes premature aging syndromes. By taking advantage of a mutator mouse model with an error‐prone mtDNA polymerase, we here investigated the impact of an established mtDNA mutational load with regards to the generation, maintenance, and differentiation of induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells. We demonstrate that somatic cells with a heavy mtDNA mutation burden were amenable for reprogramming into iPS cells. However, mutator iPS cells displayed delayed proliferation kinetics and harbored extensive differentiation defects. While mutator iPS cells had normal ATP levels and glycolytic activity, the induction of differentiation coincided with drastic decreases in ATP production and a hyperactive glycolysis. These data demonstrate the differential requirements of mitochondrial integrity for pluripotent stem cell self‐renewal versus differentiation and highlight the relevance of assessing the mitochondrial genome when aiming to generate iPS cells with robust differentiation potential. Stem Cells 2014;32:1173–1182


Oncogene | 2017

MLL-ENL-mediated leukemia initiation at the interface of lymphoid commitment

Amol Ugale; Petter Säwén; Monika Dudenhöffer-Pfeifer; Martin Wahlestedt; Gudmundur L. Norddahl; David Bryder

Translocations involving the mixed lineage leukemia-1 are recurrent events in acute leukemia and associate with lymphoid (ALL), myeloid (AML) or mixed lineage (MLL) subtypes. Despite an association with ALL in humans, murine MLL fusion models are persistently restricted to AML. We here explored this issue using an inducible mixed lineage leukemia-eleven nineteen leukemia (MLL-ENL) mouse model. Although multiple progenitor cell types with myeloid potential are potent AML leukemia-initiating cells, also the earliest lymphoid progenitors were capable of initiating AML. This ability to evoke a latent myeloid potential in the earliest lymphoid progenitors was lost upon further lymphoid commitment. At the same time, more downstream/committed lymphoid precursors also failed to initiate lymphoid leukemia. Co-expression of MLL-ENL with a constitutively active RAS allele, the most common co-mutation in MLL fusion leukemias, could influence on both disease latency and lineage assignment of developing leukemia in what appears to be a mutation-order-dependent manner. Finally, CEBPB-mediated transdifferentation of committed and otherwise leukemia-incompetent B-cell progenitors imbued these cells with leukemic competence for AML. Therefore, apart from providing detailed insight into the differential responsiveness of candidate target cells to a first-hit MLL fusion event, our data warrants caution to therapeutic approaches based on the concept of transdifferentiation.


Stem Cells | 2014

Somatic cells with a heavy mitochondrial DNA mutational load render iPS cells with distinct differentiation defects.

Martin Wahlestedt; Adam Ameur; Roksana Moraghebi; Gudmundur L. Norddahl; Gerd Sten; Niels-Bjarne Woods; David Bryder

It has become increasingly clear that several age‐associated pathologies associate with mutations in the mitochondrial genome. Experimental modeling of such events has revealed that acquisition of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) damage can impair respiratory function and, as a consequence, can lead to widespread decline in cellular function. This includes premature aging syndromes. By taking advantage of a mutator mouse model with an error‐prone mtDNA polymerase, we here investigated the impact of an established mtDNA mutational load with regards to the generation, maintenance, and differentiation of induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells. We demonstrate that somatic cells with a heavy mtDNA mutation burden were amenable for reprogramming into iPS cells. However, mutator iPS cells displayed delayed proliferation kinetics and harbored extensive differentiation defects. While mutator iPS cells had normal ATP levels and glycolytic activity, the induction of differentiation coincided with drastic decreases in ATP production and a hyperactive glycolysis. These data demonstrate the differential requirements of mitochondrial integrity for pluripotent stem cell self‐renewal versus differentiation and highlight the relevance of assessing the mitochondrial genome when aiming to generate iPS cells with robust differentiation potential. Stem Cells 2014;32:1173–1182


Cell Reports | 2017

Critical Modulation of Hematopoietic Lineage Fate by Hepatic Leukemia Factor

Martin Wahlestedt; Vasileios Ladopoulos; Isabel Hidalgo; Manuel Sánchez Castillo; Rebecca Hannah; Petter Säwén; Haixia Wan; Monika Dudenhöffer-Pfeifer; Mattias Magnusson; Gudmundur L. Norddahl; Berthold Göttgens; David Bryder

Summary A gradual restriction in lineage potential of multipotent stem/progenitor cells is a hallmark of adult hematopoiesis, but the underlying molecular events governing these processes remain incompletely understood. Here, we identified robust expression of the leukemia-associated transcription factor hepatic leukemia factor (Hlf) in normal multipotent hematopoietic progenitors, which was rapidly downregulated upon differentiation. Interference with its normal downregulation revealed Hlf as a strong negative regulator of lymphoid development, while remaining compatible with myeloid fates. Reciprocally, we observed rapid lymphoid commitment upon reduced Hlf activity. The arising phenotypes resulted from Hlf binding to active enhancers of myeloid-competent cells, transcriptional induction of myeloid, and ablation of lymphoid gene programs, with Hlf induction of nuclear factor I C (Nfic) as a functionally relevant target gene. Thereby, our studies establish Hlf as a key regulator of the earliest lineage-commitment events at the transition from multipotency to lineage-restricted progeny, with implications for both normal and malignant hematopoiesis.

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