Erythroid progenitors from patients with low-risk myelodysplastic syndromes are dependent on the surrounding micro environment for their survival

2015 
To investigate whether the type of programmed cell death of myelodysplastic erythroid cells depends on their cellular context, we performed studies on cells from patients with low-risk myelodysplastic syndromes. We compared erythroid cells (and their precursor cells) from the mononuclear cell fraction with those from the hematon fraction, which are compacted complexes of hematopoietic cells surrounded by their own micro-environment. In directly fixed materials, erythroblasts exhibited signs of autophagy with limited apoptosis ( p  = 0.001). In contrast, the myelodysplastic erythroblasts from the hematon fraction did not exhibit an increased tendency toward apoptosis after culture (7 ± 3.3% vs. 1.8 ± 2.3%), which was in line with results for normal bone marrow cells. The same dependency on the micro-environment was noted for immature erythroid progenitor cells. Myelodysplastic hematons exhibited distinct numbers of erythroid burst-forming units in association with an extensive network of stromal cells, whereas small numbers of erythroid burst-forming units were generated from the myelodysplastic mononuclear cells compared with normal mononuclear cells (10.2 ± 9 vs. 162 ± 125, p
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