Engraftment of chronic myelomonocytic leukemia cells in immunocompromised mice supports disease dependency on cytokines

2017 
Chronic myelomonocytic leukemia (CMML) is a clonal hematopoietic stem cell disorder that typically associates with mutations in epigenetic, splicing, and signaling genes. Genetically modified mouse models only partially recapitulate the disease phenotype, whereas xenotransplantation of CMML cells in immunocompromised mice has been rarely successful so far. Here, CMML CD34 + cells sorted from patient bone marrow (BM) or peripheral blood (PB) were injected intravenously into NSG (NOD/LtSz-scid IL2rγnull) mice and NSG mice engineered to express human granulo-monocyte colony-stimulating factor, stem cell factor, and interleukin-3 (NSGS mice). Fifteen out of 16 patient samples (94%) successfully engrafted into NSG or NSGS or both mouse strains. The expansion of human cells, predominant in the BM, was also observed in the spleen and the PB and was greatly enhanced in mice producing the 3 human cytokines. Gene mutations identified in engrafted cells were mostly similar to those identified in patient cells before injection. Successful secondary engraftment was obtained in NSGS mice in 3 out of 10 attempts. Thus, primary CMML leukemic cells expand much better in NSGS compared with NSG mice with limited efficacy of secondary transplant.
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