How does location of hematopoiesis change throughout development? - Answers Early embryo - yolk
sac
Fetus - fetal liver and spleen
4-5 months - shift to bone marrow
What does the erythroid lineage give rise to? - Answers Blood cells and megakaryocytes
What do megakaryocytes do? - Answers Produces platelets and resides permanently in the bone
marrow
What cells are part of the myeloid lineage? - Answers Granulocytes and
monocytes/macrophages/dendritic cells and mast cells
What is a neutrophil? - Answers A short lived immune system cell that has phagocytic activity
What are eosinophils? - Answers Defends against parasites; contain basic substances
What are basophils? - Answers They regulate the immune responses to parasites and contain acidic
substances
What is a monocyte? - Answers Precursor cell to macrophages that circulate the blood
What is a macrophage? - Answers A mature monocyte that can phagocytose several bacteria and act
as an APC
Whata are immature dendritic cells? - Answers They are highly phagocytic cells that mature after
ingesting a pathogen
What makes dendritic cells such great APCs? - Answers They express a lot of MHC proteins and co-
stimulatory molecules
What are mast cells? - Answers They are cells that are involved in the innate immune responses
during microbial infection and release chemicals to attrack neutrophils and monocytes
What does the lymphoid lineage give rise to? - Answers Large granular lymphocytes and small
lymphocytes
What are natural killer cells? - Answers They target virally infected cells and secrete cytokines to
impede viral replicaiton
What are Cytotoxic T cells ? - Answers They kill virally infected cells and some types of cancer cells
What is the role of T helper cells? - Answers Provide cytokine and co-stimulatory signals to CTLS,
macrophages, and stimulate B cells
What are T-regulatory cells? - Answers They inhibit T cell responses and are involved in controlling
immune reactions and prevent autoimmunity
What are B cells? - Answers They synthesize and secrete antibodies
What are plasma cells? - Answers They are differentiated B cells that synthesize and secrete
antibodies
What are the key properties of hematopoeitic stem cells? - Answers Their ability of self-renewal,
ability to give rise to amture cell types that have distinct morphology and specialized functions
Two models that explain how HSCs can divide in to two non-identical daughter cells? - Answers
Asymmetric cell division and environmental asymmetry
Explain asymmetric cell division - Answers During cell division, specific cell-fate determinants are not
distributed equally before the onset of division which allows one daughter cell to receive these
determinants and initiate differentiation. During mitosis, cleavage plane is oriented unevenly
Explain environmental asymmetry - Answers HSC undergoes symmetrical cell division but one
daughter cells receives signals from the microenvironment that initiates its differentiation
What in the bone marrow is important for signaling in hematopoiesis? - Answers Osteoblasts and
other stromal cells provide important contact-dependent interactions through cell adhesion
molecules and their ligands, as well as cytokines and chemokines to control proliferation and
differentiation
What is a key protein on a stem cell that determines its fate? - Answers The kit protein, when bound
to a ligand seems to prevent cell from committing to differentiation
Why is signaling important for the survival of the cell? - Answers The cell must receive a survival
signal or else its activate apoptosis
What is the interface of the bone and bone marrow called? - Answers The endosteum
What is present at the endosteum? - Answers Bone-lining cells such as osteoblasts, and osteoclasts
Why are arteries important in the bone marrow for hematopoiesis? - Answers It brings cytokines to
act on the progenitors
, Where can HSCs be found in the bone marrow? - Answers in the endosteum and in contact witht he
sinusoidal endothelium and bone-distance sites
What cells product various cytokines to support HSCs? - Answers Stromal cells such as mesenchymal
stem cells, CAR cells, and adipocytes as well as osteoblasts and SNO cells which are located near the
endosteum
An important chemokine for maintenance of HSCs? - Answers CXCL12, SCF, and thrombopoietin
What is the role of CXCL12? - Answers Plays an important role in maintaining the quiescent HSC pool
What is the role of SCF? - Answers Plays a role in HSC self-renewal, and possibly formation of HSC
niche
What does thrombopoietin do? - Answers Important in HSC renewal
What are CAR cells? - Answers CXCL12-abundant reticular cells
Why are CAR cells important? - Answers In the vascular region, they may be important in the
retention of hematopoietic progenitors in the niche. In the endosteal regions, they seem to be
important in maintaining HSC quiescence
If HSCs are rare cells, how are we keeping up with our supply of red/white cells? - Answers CLPs and
CMPs are progenitor cells that can continue to expand temporarily while differentiating
What are the three sources of HSCs we can isolate from? - Answers The bone marrow, peripheral
blood and umbilical cord blood
About how many cells extracted from the bone marrow contain transplatable HSC? - Answers About
1 in 10^6, others include bone cells, stromal cells, and white and red cells
How does extracting HSCs from the blood work? - Answers First we use G-CSF to cause cells in the
myeloid lineage to secrete enzymes that breakdown cell adhesion molecules between HSC and
stromal cells which result in HSC emigration. Then we use apheresis to isolate leukocytes and use
CD34 antibodies to select for HSCs
What is the purpose of erythropoietin? - Answers To stimulate the production of more erythrocytes
What is the colony forming unit assay used for and how is it done? - Answers - Used to enumerate
multi-potential or lineage-committed hematopoietic progenitor cells from bone marrow
- Cells placed on media with various growth factors then observe the colonies differ in size,
morphology, and cell composition
What are colony-stimulated factors? - Answers Glycoproteins that bind to specific cell-surface
receptors to stimulate colony growth
What has CSF demonstrated in vitro? - Answers Control rate of cell division, # of time a progenitor
cell undergoes replication before differentiating, act early to influence commitment, act late to
facilitate differentiation
What are two markers in leukocytes that can be used to identify its lineage and subsets? - Answers
Cluster of Differentiation (CD) and Lineage markers (Lin)
What kind of markers do HSCs are known to have? - Answers HSCs are known to be Lin- and CD34+ as
well as CD38
How can we use markers to isolate HSCs? - Answers We can use Lin antibodies to negatively select
for HSCs
How does FACS work? - Answers Sample is incubated to an antibody attached with a fluorochrome.
FAC machines then inspect each cell individually and divide them depending on what fluorochrome is
detected. Can detect multiple antibodies.
For what processes are signaling pathways important in the immune system? - Answers
Hematopoiesis, recognition of a pathogen, activation of adaptive immune responses by B/T cells, and
communication between different cell types
Three types of signaling that are important in the immune system - Answers 1 .Autocrine -
responding to self-produced molecules.
2. Juxtacrine - responding by cell contact
3. Paracrine - responding to molecules produced from neighbouring cells
What is an example of autocrine signalling? - Answers When T-helper cells produce IL2 cytokines that
stimulate itself
What is an example of juxtacrine signaling? - Answers Stromal cells and HSC in the bone marrow
Example of paracrine signalling? - Answers T helper cells activating B cells
What are the properties of a good signaling/detection system? - Answers 1. High sensitivity and
amplification of the signal