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Letter


Nature Medicine 10, 858 - 864 (2004)
Published online: 4 July 2004 | doi:10.1038/nm1075

Progenitor cell trafficking is regulated by hypoxic gradients through HIF-1 induction of SDF-1

Daniel J Ceradini1, Anita R Kulkarni1, Matthew J Callaghan1, Oren M Tepper1, Nicholas Bastidas1, Mark E Kleinman1, Jennifer M Capla1, Robert D Galiano1, Jamie P Levine1 & Geoffrey C Gurtner1


The trafficking of circulating stem and progenitor cells to areas of tissue damage is poorly understood. The chemokine stromal cell–derived factor-1 (SDF-1 or CXCL12) mediates homing of stem cells to bone marrow by binding to CXCR4 on circulating cells1, 2. SDF-1 and CXCR4 are expressed in complementary patterns during embryonic organogenesis and guide primordial stem cells to sites of rapid vascular expansion3. However, the regulation of SDF-1 and its physiological role in peripheral tissue repair remain incompletely understood4. Here we show that SDF-1 gene expression is regulated by the transcription factor hypoxia-inducible factor-1 (HIF-1) in endothelial cells, resulting in selective in vivo expression of SDF-1 in ischemic tissue in direct proportion to reduced oxygen tension. HIF-1-induced SDF-1 expression increases the adhesion, migration and homing of circulating CXCR4-positive progenitor cells to ischemic tissue. Blockade of SDF-1 in ischemic tissue or CXCR4 on circulating cells prevents progenitor cell recruitment to sites of injury. Discrete regions of hypoxia in the bone marrow compartment also show increased SDF-1 expression and progenitor cell tropism. These data show that the recruitment of CXCR4-positive progenitor cells to regenerating tissues is mediated by hypoxic gradients via HIF-1-induced expression of SDF-1.


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