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Blood, 1 December 2005, Vol. 106, No. 12, pp. 3682-3683.
The wizard of HoxJOHNS HOPKINS UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF MEDICINE
In this issue of Blood, Lawrence and colleagues provide strong evidence that HoxA9 plays a key physiologic role in the proliferation of early mouse hematopoietic stem progenitor cells.
The 39 Hox family genes1 are clustered at 4 chromosomal loci (HoxA1-7, A9-11, and A13 at chromosome 7p15; HoxB1-9 and B13 at 17p21; HoxC4-6 and C8-13 at 12q13; and HoxD1, D3, D4, and D8-13 at 2q31) in humans. All the mammalian Hox genes are highly homologous to the HOM-C genes of Drosophila, discovered by Bridges and Morgan,2 who in 1915 described the "bithorax" mutation, and later Lewis, who noted a "homeotic" mutant where an additional pair of legs was formed in place of the antennae. In mammals as in flies, Hox genes exhibit striking "collinearity" of expression and effect: during embryonic body development Hox gene expression profiles correlate with body segments and with developmental stage in a direct manner (ie, 3' genes such as HoxA1 and B1 are expressed more anteriorly and earlier in development than their 5' paralogs, which are expressed later and in more posterior regions). However, there is no "one Hox, one segment" rule; instead, chromosomally adjacent clusters of Hox genes (eg, HoxA9-11) are expressed in clusters at a given developmental stage of a given body segment. This redundancy is likely part of the reason that so few of the Hox genes are individually necessary for any given functional role in hematopoiesis. Moreover, hematopoiesis seems to break the collinearity rule. Clearly, global transcriptomic and proteomic methodologies should be of considerable utility in dissecting the physiologic functions of the Hox family and pathways in hematopoiesis.
As the normal physiology is being pains-takingly illuminated, the ability of certain Hox genes and TAT-Hox proteins to stimulate in vivo and ex vivo hematopoietic stem cell expansion is already nearing clinical application, especially with HoxB4. In this context we wonder the following. (1) Should we prefer any one Hox for clinical stem cell expansion? Specifically, should we test HoxA9 now that we know it is not only sufficient but also necessary for optimal stem cell function in vivo (in mice)? Or will most or all of these Hox paralogs function similarly? (2) Can we further enhance stem cell expansion by combined application of more than one Hox molecule? (3) As we learn more about stem cell functional wiring diagrams, can we productively improve the "context" for stem cell expansion by up-regulating or down-regulating Hox or other pathways? (4) Finally, determining how the Hox genes are regulated may permit efficient stimulation of the physiologic expression profile to optimally drive hematopoietic stem cell expansions. References
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