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Dive into the research topics where Michael Lutteropp is active.

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Featured researches published by Michael Lutteropp.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2011

The autophagy protein Atg7 is essential for hematopoietic stem cell maintenance

Monika Mortensen; Elizabeth J. Soilleux; Gordana Djordjevic; Rebecca Tripp; Michael Lutteropp; Elham Sadighi-Akha; Amanda J. Stranks; Julie Glanville; Samantha J. L. Knight; Sten Eirik W. Jacobsen; Kamil R. Kranc; Anna Katharina Simon

Adult mouse LSK cells unable to undergo autophagy contain fewer HSCs, accumulate mitochondria, and fail to reconstitute lethally irradiated mice.


Nature | 2013

Platelet-biased stem cells reside at the apex of the haematopoietic stem-cell hierarchy

Alejandra Sanjuan-Pla; Iain C. Macaulay; Christina T. Jensen; Petter S. Woll; Tiago C. Luis; Adam Mead; Susan Hardman Moore; C Carella; S Matsuoka; T Bouriez Jones; Onima Chowdhury; L Stenson; Michael Lutteropp; Green Jca.; R Facchini; Hanane Boukarabila; Amit Grover; Adriana Gambardella; Supat Thongjuea; Joana Carrelha; P Tarrant; Debbie Atkinson; Clark S-A.; Claus Nerlov; Jacobsen Sew.

The blood system is maintained by a small pool of haematopoietic stem cells (HSCs), which are required and sufficient for replenishing all human blood cell lineages at millions of cells per second throughout life. Megakaryocytes in the bone marrow are responsible for the continuous production of platelets in the blood, crucial for preventing bleeding—a common and life-threatening side effect of many cancer therapies—and major efforts are focused at identifying the most suitable cellular and molecular targets to enhance platelet production after bone marrow transplantation or chemotherapy. Although it has become clear that distinct HSC subsets exist that are stably biased towards the generation of lymphoid or myeloid blood cells, we are yet to learn whether other types of lineage-biased HSC exist or understand their inter-relationships and how differently lineage-biased HSCs are generated and maintained. The functional relevance of notable phenotypic and molecular similarities between megakaryocytes and bone marrow cells with an HSC cell-surface phenotype remains unclear. Here we identify and prospectively isolate a molecularly and functionally distinct mouse HSC subset primed for platelet-specific gene expression, with enhanced propensity for short- and long-term reconstitution of platelets. Maintenance of platelet-biased HSCs crucially depends on thrombopoietin, the primary extrinsic regulator of platelet development. Platelet-primed HSCs also frequently have a long-term myeloid lineage bias, can self-renew and give rise to lymphoid-biased HSCs. These findings show that HSC subtypes can be organized into a cellular hierarchy, with platelet-primed HSCs at the apex. They also demonstrate that molecular and functional priming for platelet development initiates already in a distinct HSC population. The identification of a platelet-primed HSC population should enable the rational design of therapies enhancing platelet output.


Cell Stem Cell | 2013

Lymphomyeloid Contribution of an Immune-Restricted Progenitor Emerging Prior to Definitive Hematopoietic Stem Cells.

Charlotta Böiers; Joana Carrelha; Michael Lutteropp; Sidinh Luc; Joanna C.A. Green; Emanuele Azzoni; Petter S. Woll; Adam Mead; Anne Hultquist; Gemma Swiers; Elisa Gomez Perdiguero; Iain C Macaulay; Luca Melchiori; Tiago C. Luis; Shabnam Kharazi; Tiphaine Bouriez-Jones; Qiaolin Deng; Annica Pontén; Deborah Atkinson; Christina T. Jensen; Ewa Sitnicka; Frederic Geissmann; Isabelle Godin; Rickard Sandberg; Marella de Bruijn; Sten Eirik W. Jacobsen

In jawed vertebrates, development of an adaptive immune-system is essential for protection of the born organism against otherwise life-threatening pathogens. Myeloid cells of the innate immune system are formed early in development, whereas lymphopoiesis has been suggested to initiate much later, following emergence of definitive hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs). Herein, we demonstrate that the embryonic lymphoid commitment process initiates earlier than previously appreciated, prior to emergence of definitive HSCs, through establishment of a previously unrecognized entirely immune-restricted and lymphoid-primed progenitor. Notably, this immune-restricted progenitor appears to first emerge in the yolk sac and contributes physiologically to the establishment of lymphoid and some myeloid components of the immune-system, establishing the lymphomyeloid lineage restriction process as an early and physiologically important lineage-commitment step in mammalian hematopoiesis.


Nature Immunology | 2012

The earliest thymic T cell progenitors sustain B cell and myeloid lineage potential

Sidinh Luc; Tiago C. Luis; Hanane Boukarabila; Iain C Macaulay; Natalija Buza-Vidas; Tiphaine Bouriez-Jones; Michael Lutteropp; Petter S. Woll; Stephen Loughran; Adam Mead; Anne Hultquist; John Brown; Takuo Mizukami; S Matsuoka; Helen Ferry; Kristina Anderson; Deborah Atkinson; Shamit Soneji; Aniela Domanski; Alison Farley; Alejandra Sanjuan-Pla; Cintia Carella; Roger Patient; Marella de Bruijn; Tariq Enver; Claus Nerlov; C. Clare Blackburn; Isabelle Godin; Sten Eirik W. Jacobsen

The stepwise commitment from hematopoietic stem cells in the bone marrow to T lymphocyte–restricted progenitors in the thymus represents a paradigm for understanding the requirement for distinct extrinsic cues during different stages of lineage restriction from multipotent to lineage-restricted progenitors. However, the commitment stage at which progenitors migrate from the bone marrow to the thymus remains unclear. Here we provide functional and molecular evidence at the single-cell level that the earliest progenitors in the neonatal thymus had combined granulocyte-monocyte, T lymphocyte and B lymphocyte lineage potential but not megakaryocyte-erythroid lineage potential. These potentials were identical to those of candidate thymus-seeding progenitors in the bone marrow, which were closely related at the molecular level. Our findings establish the distinct lineage-restriction stage at which the T cell lineage–commitment process transits from the bone marrow to the remote thymus.


Nature Immunology | 2016

Distinct myeloid progenitor-differentiation pathways identified through single-cell RNA sequencing

Roy Drissen; Natalija Buza-Vidas; Petter S. Woll; Supat Thongjuea; Adriana Gambardella; Alice Giustacchini; Elena Mancini; Alya Zriwil; Michael Lutteropp; Amit Grover; Adam Mead; Ewa Sitnicka; Sten Eirik W. Jacobsen; Claus Nerlov

According to current models of hematopoiesis, lymphoid-primed multi-potent progenitors (LMPPs) (Lin−Sca-1+c-Kit+CD34+Flt3hi) and common myeloid progenitors (CMPs) (Lin−Sca-1+c-Kit+CD34+CD41hi) establish an early branch point for separate lineage-commitment pathways from hematopoietic stem cells, with the notable exception that both pathways are proposed to generate all myeloid innate immune cell types through the same myeloid-restricted pre–granulocyte-macrophage progenitor (pre-GM) (Lin−Sca-1−c-Kit+CD41−FcγRII/III−CD150−CD105−). By single-cell transcriptome profiling of pre-GMs, we identified distinct myeloid differentiation pathways: a pathway expressing the gene encoding the transcription factor GATA-1 generated mast cells, eosinophils, megakaryocytes and erythroid cells, and a pathway lacking expression of that gene generated monocytes, neutrophils and lymphocytes. These results identify an early hematopoietic-lineage bifurcation that separates the myeloid lineages before their segregation from other hematopoietic-lineage potential.


Blood | 2011

FLT3 expression initiates in fully multipotent mouse hematopoietic progenitor cells

Natalija Buza-Vidas; Petter S. Woll; Anne Hultquist; Michael Lutteropp; Tiphaine Bouriez-Jones; Helen Ferry; Sidinh Luc; Sten Eirik W. Jacobsen

Lymphoid-primed multipotent progenitors with down-regulated megakaryocyte-erythroid (MkE) potential are restricted to cells with high levels of cell-surface FLT3 expression, whereas HSCs and MkE progenitors lack detectable cell-surface FLT3. These findings are compatible with FLT3 cell-surface expression not being detectable in the fully multipotent stem/progenitor cell compartment in mice. If so, this process could be distinct from human hematopoiesis, in which FLT3 already is expressed in multipotent stem/progenitor cells. The expression pattern of Flt3 (mRNA) and FLT3 (protein) in multipotent progenitors is of considerable relevance for mouse models in which prognostically important Flt3 mutations are expressed under control of the endogenous mouse Flt3 promoter. Herein, we demonstrate that mouse Flt3 expression initiates in fully multipotent progenitors because in addition to lymphoid and granulocyte-monocyte progenitors, FLT3(-) Mk- and E-restricted downstream progenitors are also highly labeled when Flt3-Cre fate mapping is applied.


Cell Reports | 2013

FLT3-ITDs Instruct a Myeloid Differentiation and Transformation Bias in Lymphomyeloid Multipotent Progenitors.

Adam Mead; Shabnam Kharazi; Deborah Atkinson; Iain C Macaulay; Christian Pecquet; Stephen Loughran; Michael Lutteropp; Petter S. Woll; Onima Chowdhury; Sidinh Luc; Natalija Buza-Vidas; Helen Ferry; Sally-Ann Clark; Nicolas Goardon; Paresh Vyas; Stefan N. Constantinescu; Ewa Sitnicka; Claus Nerlov; Sten Eirik W. Jacobsen

Summary Whether signals mediated via growth factor receptors (GFRs) might influence lineage fate in multipotent progenitors (MPPs) is unclear. We explored this issue in a mouse knockin model of gain-of-function Flt3-ITD mutation because FLT3-ITDs are paradoxically restricted to acute myeloid leukemia even though Flt3 primarily promotes lymphoid development during normal hematopoiesis. When expressed in MPPs, Flt3-ITD collaborated with Runx1 mutation to induce high-penetrance aggressive leukemias that were exclusively of the myeloid phenotype. Flt3-ITDs preferentially expanded MPPs with reduced lymphoid and increased myeloid transcriptional priming while compromising early B and T lymphopoiesis. Flt3-ITD-induced myeloid lineage bias involved upregulation of the transcription factor Pu.1, which is a direct target gene of Stat3, an aberrantly activated target of Flt3-ITDs, further establishing how lineage bias can be inflicted on MPPs through aberrant GFR signaling. Collectively, these findings provide new insights into how oncogenic mutations might subvert the normal process of lineage commitment and dictate the phenotype of resulting malignancies.


Nature Immunology | 2016

Initial seeding of the embryonic thymus by immune-restricted lympho-myeloid progenitors

Tiago C. Luis; Sidinh Luc; Takuo Mizukami; Hanane Boukarabila; Supat Thongjuea; Petter S. Woll; Emanuele Azzoni; Alice Giustacchini; Michael Lutteropp; Tiphaine Bouriez-Jones; Harsh Vaidya; Adam Mead; Deborah Atkinson; Charlotta Böiers; Joana Carrelha; Iain C Macaulay; Roger Patient; Frederic Geissmann; Claus Nerlov; Rickard Sandberg; Marella de Bruijn; C. Clare Blackburn; Isabelle Godin; Sten Eirik W. Jacobsen

The final stages of restriction to the T cell lineage occur in the thymus after the entry of thymus-seeding progenitors (TSPs). The identity and lineage potential of TSPs remains unclear. Because the first embryonic TSPs enter a non-vascularized thymic rudiment, we were able to directly image and establish the functional and molecular properties of embryonic thymopoiesis-initiating progenitors (T-IPs) before their entry into the thymus and activation of Notch signaling. T-IPs did not include multipotent stem cells or molecular evidence of T cell–restricted progenitors. Instead, single-cell molecular and functional analysis demonstrated that most fetal T-IPs expressed genes of and had the potential to develop into lymphoid as well as myeloid components of the immune system. Moreover, studies of embryos deficient in the transcriptional regulator RBPJ demonstrated that canonical Notch signaling was not involved in pre-thymic restriction to the T cell lineage or the migration of T-IPs.


Blood | 2012

Dicer is selectively important for the earliest stages of erythroid development.

Natalija Buza-Vidas; Valeriu B. Cismasiu; Susan Hardman Moore; Adam Mead; Petter S. Woll; Michael Lutteropp; Luca Melchiori; Sidinh Luc; Tiphaine Bouriez-Jones; Deborah Atkinson; Dónal O'Carroll; Sten Eirik W. Jacobsen; Claus Nerlov


Blood | 2011

The Earliest Thymic T Cell Progenitors Sustain B Cell and Myeloid Lineage Potentials

Sidinh Luc; Iain C Macaulay; Natalija Buza-Vidas; Tiphaine Bouriez-Jones; Michael Lutteropp; Petter S. Woll; Adam Mead; Hanane Boukarabila; Tiago C. Luis; T Mizukami; S Matsuoka; John Brown; Helen Ferry; Kristina Anderson; Debbie Atkinson; Shamit Soneji; A Domanski; A Farley; Alejandra Sanjuan-Pla; C Carella; Roger Patient; M de Bruijn; Tariq Enver; Claus Nerlov; C. Clare Blackburn; Isabelle Godin; Jacobsen Sew.

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Sten Eirik W. Jacobsen

Karolinska University Hospital

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Claus Nerlov

European Bioinformatics Institute

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