Natalizumab and impedance of the homing of CD34+ hematopoietic progenitors.

Journal: Archives Of Neurology
Published:
Abstract

Background: Treatment with natalizumab, an antibody blocking the α4-integrin, is associated with increased numbers of circulating CD34+ cells in the peripheral blood of patients with multiple sclerosis.

Objective: To determine whether natalizumab mobilizes CD34+ cells from or inhibits homing to the bone marrow (BM).

Methods: Fifty-two patients with relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis treated with natalizumab were included. Flow cytometric analyses; polymerase chain reaction assays for JC (John Cunningham) virus DNA detection; and adhesion, migration, and apoptosis assays of immunomagnetically enriched peripheral blood and BM CD34+ cells were conducted. A comparison was made with CD34+ cells from granulocyte colony-stimulating factor-mobilized peripheral blood or steady-state BM of age- and sex-matched healthy donors.

Results: We found adhesion and migration of peripheral blood-derived CD34+ cells to be reduced. In BM aspirates from natalizumab-treated patients, the cellularity, the proportion, and the adhesive capacity of CD34+ cells were normal. The JC virus was undetectable.

Conclusions: Natalizumab mediates an increase in circulating CD34+ cells by interfering with homing to the BM. Thus, CD34+ cells appear unlikely to represent a source mobilizing JC virus out of the BM in patients treated with natalizumab.

Authors
Christian Saure, Clemens Warnke, Fabian Zohren, Thomas Schroeder, Ingmar Bruns, Ron Cadeddu, Christian Weigelt, Ute Fischer, Guido Kobbe, Hans-peter Hartung, Ortwin Adams, Bernd Kieseier, Rainer Haas