Jenna M. Frame
University of Rochester Medical Center
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Featured researches published by Jenna M. Frame.
Blood | 2013
Paul D. Kingsley; Emily Greenfest-Allen; Jenna M. Frame; Timothy Bushnell; Jeffrey Malik; Kathleen E. McGrath; Christian J. Stoeckert; James Palis
Erythroid ontogeny is characterized by overlapping waves of primitive and definitive erythroid lineages that share many morphologic features during terminal maturation but have marked differences in cell size and globin expression. In the present study, we compared global gene expression in primitive, fetal definitive, and adult definitive erythroid cells at morphologically equivalent stages of maturation purified from embryonic, fetal, and adult mice. Surprisingly, most transcriptional complexity in erythroid precursors is already present by the proerythroblast stage. Transcript levels are markedly modulated during terminal erythroid maturation, but housekeeping genes are not preferentially lost. Although primitive and definitive erythroid lineages share a large set of nonhousekeeping genes, annotation of lineage-restricted genes shows that alternate gene usage occurs within shared functional categories, as exemplified by the selective expression of aquaporins 3 and 8 in primitive erythroblasts and aquaporins 1 and 9 in adult definitive erythroblasts. Consistent with the known functions of Aqp3 and Aqp8 as H2O2 transporters, primitive, but not definitive, erythroblasts preferentially accumulate reactive oxygen species after exogenous H2O2 exposure. We have created a user-friendly Web site (http://www.cbil.upenn.edu/ErythronDB) to make these global expression data readily accessible and amenable to complex search strategies by the scientific community.
Cell Reports | 2015
Kathleen E. McGrath; Jenna M. Frame; Katherine H. Fegan; James R. Bowen; Simon J. Conway; Seana C. Catherman; Paul D. Kingsley; Anne D. Koniski; James Palis
Hematopoietic potential arises in mammalian embryos before adult-repopulating hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs). At embryonic day 9.5 (E9.5), we show the first murine definitive erythro-myeloid progenitors (EMPs) have an immunophenotype distinct from primitive hematopoietic progenitors, maturing megakaryocytes and macrophages, and rare B cell potential. EMPs emerge in the yolk sac with erythroid and broad myeloid, but not lymphoid, potential. EMPs migrate to the fetal liver and rapidly differentiate, including production of circulating neutrophils by E11.5. Although the surface markers, transcription factors, and lineage potential associated with EMPs overlap with those found in adult definitive hematopoiesis, they are present in unique combinations or proportions that result in a specialized definitive embryonic progenitor. Furthermore, we find that embryonic stem cell (ESC)-derived hematopoiesis recapitulates early yolk sac hematopoiesis, including primitive, EMP, and rare B cell potential. EMPs do not have long-term potential when transplanted in immunocompromised adults, but they can provide transient adult-like RBC reconstitution.
Blood | 2011
Samantha J. England; Kathleen E. McGrath; Jenna M. Frame; James Palis
In the hematopoietic hierarchy, only stem cells are thought to be capable of long-term self-renewal. Erythroid progenitors derived from fetal or adult mammalian hematopoietic tissues are capable of short-term, or restricted (10(2)- to 10(5)-fold), ex vivo expansion in the presence of erythropoietin, stem cell factor, and dexamethasone. Here, we report that primary erythroid precursors derived from early mouse embryos are capable of extensive (10(6)- to 10(60)-fold) ex vivo proliferation. These cells morphologically, immunophenotypically, and functionally resemble proerythroblasts, maintaining both cytokine dependence and the potential, despite prolonged culture, to generate enucleated erythrocytes after 3-4 maturational cell divisions. This capacity for extensive erythroblast self-renewal is temporally associated with the emergence of definitive erythropoiesis in the yolk sac and its transition to the fetal liver. In contrast, hematopoietic stem cell-derived definitive erythropoiesis in the adult is associated almost exclusively with restricted ex vivo self-renewal. Primary primitive erythroid precursors, which lack significant expression of Kit and glucocorticoid receptors, lack ex vivo self-renewal capacity. Extensively self-renewing erythroblasts, despite their near complete maturity within the hematopoietic hierarchy, may ultimately serve as a renewable source of red cells for transfusion therapy.
Blood Cells Molecules and Diseases | 2013
Jenna M. Frame; Kathleen E. McGrath; James Palis
Erythro-myeloid progenitors (EMP) serve as a major source of hematopoiesis in the developing conceptus prior to the formation of a permanent blood system. In this review, we summarize the current knowledge regarding the emergence, fate, and potential of this hematopoietic stem cell (HSC)-independent wave of hematopoietic progenitors, focusing on the murine embryo as a model system. A better understanding of the temporal and spatial control of hematopoietic emergence in the embryo will ultimately improve our ability to derive hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells from embryonic stem cells and induced pluripotent stem cells to serve therapeutic purposes.
Stem Cells | 2016
Jenna M. Frame; Katherine H. Fegan; Simon J. Conway; Kathleen E. McGrath; James Palis
Adult‐repopulating hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) emerge in low numbers in the midgestation mouse embryo from a subset of arterial endothelium, through an endothelial‐to‐hematopoietic transition. HSC‐producing arterial hemogenic endothelium relies on the establishment of embryonic blood flow and arterial identity, and requires β‐catenin signaling. Specified prior to and during the formation of these initial HSCs are thousands of yolk sac‐derived erythro‐myeloid progenitors (EMPs). EMPs ensure embryonic survival prior to the establishment of a permanent hematopoietic system, and provide subsets of long‐lived tissue macrophages. While an endothelial origin for these HSC‐independent definitive progenitors is also accepted, the spatial location and temporal output of yolk sac hemogenic endothelium over developmental time remain undefined. We performed a spatiotemporal analysis of EMP emergence, and document the morphological steps of the endothelial‐to‐hematopoietic transition. Emergence of rounded EMPs from polygonal clusters of Kit+ cells initiates prior to the establishment of arborized arterial and venous vasculature in the yolk sac. Interestingly, Kit+ polygonal clusters are detected in both arterial and venous vessels after remodeling. To determine whether there are similar mechanisms regulating the specification of EMPs with other angiogenic signals regulating adult‐repopulating HSCs, we investigated the role of embryonic blood flow and Wnt/β‐catenin signaling during EMP emergence. In embryos lacking a functional circulation, rounded Kit+ EMPs still fully emerge from unremodeled yolk sac vasculature. In contrast, canonical Wnt signaling appears to be a common mechanism regulating hematopoietic emergence from hemogenic endothelium. These data illustrate the heterogeneity in hematopoietic output and spatiotemporal regulation of primary embryonic hemogenic endothelium. Stem Cells 2016;34:431–444
Experimental Hematology | 2011
Scott A. Peslak; Jesse Wenger; Jeffrey C. Bemis; Paul D. Kingsley; Jenna M. Frame; Anne D. Koniski; Yuhchyau Chen; Jacqueline P. Williams; Kathleen E. McGrath; Stephen D. Dertinger; James Palis
OBJECTIVE Clastogenic injury of the erythroid lineage results in anemia, reticulocytopenia, and transient appearance of micronucleated reticulocytes. However, the micronucleated reticulocyte dose-response in murine models is only linear to 2 Gy total body irradiation and paradoxically decreases at higher exposures, suggesting complex radiation effects on erythroid intermediates. To better understand this phenomenon, we investigated the kinetics and apoptotic response of the erythron to sublethal radiation injury. MATERIALS AND METHODS We analyzed the response to 1 and 4 Gy total body irradiation of erythroid progenitors and precursors using colony assays and imaging flow cytometry, respectively. We also investigated cell cycling and apoptotic gene expression of the steady-state erythron. RESULTS After 1 Gy total body irradiation, erythroid progenitors and precursors were partially depleted. In contrast, essentially all bone marrow erythroid progenitors and precursors were lost within 2 days after 4 Gy irradiation. Imaging flow cytometry analysis revealed preferential loss of phenotypic erythroid colony-forming units and proerythroblasts immediately after sublethal irradiation. Furthermore, these populations underwent radiation-induced apoptosis, without changes in steady-state cellular proliferation, at much higher frequencies than later-stage erythroid precursors. Primary erythroid precursor maturation is associated with marked Bcl-xL upregulation and Bax and Bid downregulation. CONCLUSIONS Micronucleated reticulocyte loss after higher sublethal radiation exposures results from rapid depletion of erythroid progenitors and precursors. This injury reveals that erythroid colony-forming units and proerythroblasts constitute a particularly proapoptotic compartment within the erythron. We conclude that the functional transition of primary proerythroblasts to later-stage erythroid precursors is characterized by a shift from a proapoptotic to an antiapoptotic phenotype.
Seminars in Immunology | 2015
Kathleen E. McGrath; Jenna M. Frame; James Palis
The paradigm that all blood cells are derived from hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) has been challenged by two findings. First, there are tissue-resident hematopoietic cells, including subsets of macrophages that are not replenished by adult HSCs, but instead are maintained by self-renewal of fetal-derived cells. Second, during embryogenesis, there is a conserved program of HSC-independent hematopoiesis that precedes HSC function and is required for embryonic survival. The presence of waves of HSC-independent hematopoiesis as well as fetal HSCs raises questions about the origin of fetal-derived adult tissue-resident macrophages. In the murine embryo, historical examination of embryonic macrophage and monocyte populations combined with recent reports utilizing genetic lineage-tracing approaches has led to a model of macrophage ontogeny that can be integrated with existing models of hematopoietic ontogeny. The first wave of hematopoiesis contains primitive erythroid, megakaryocyte and macrophage progenitors that arise in the yolk sac, and these macrophage progenitors are the source of early macrophages throughout the embryo, including the liver. A second wave of multipotential erythro-myeloid progenitors (EMPs) also arises in the yolk sac. EMPs colonize the fetal liver, initiating myelopoiesis and forming macrophages. Lineage tracing indicates that this second wave of macrophages are distributed in most fetal tissues, although not appreciably in the brain. Thus, fetal-derived adult tissue-resident macrophages, other than microglia, appear to predominately derive from EMPs. While HSCs emerge at midgestation and colonize the fetal liver, the relative contribution of fetal HSCs to tissue macrophages at later stages of development is unclear. The inclusion of macrophage potential in multiple waves of hematopoiesis is consistent with reports of their functional roles throughout development in innate immunity, phagocytosis, and tissue morphogenesis and remodeling. Understanding the influences of developmental origin, as well as local tissue-specific signals, will be necessary to fully decode the diverse functions and responses of tissue-resident macrophages.
Blood | 2011
Kathleen E. McGrath; Jenna M. Frame; George Fromm; Anne D. Koniski; Paul D. Kingsley; Jane A. Little; Michael Bulger; James Palis
Archive | 2017
Paul D. Kingsley; Emily Greenfest-Allen; Jenna M. Frame; Timothy Bushnell; Jeffrey Malik; Kathleen E. McGrath; Christian J. Stoeckert; James Palis
Experimental Hematology | 2017
Jenna M. Frame; Virginie Esain; Sung-Eun Lim; Trista E. North