Stem Cells & Craniofacial Bone Marrow Microenvironments - The Koh Lab at Yale School of Medicine
May 08, 2026Transcript
- 00:05Bone marrow microenvironment
- 00:06is an extremely sophisticated
- 00:09and highly coordinated
- 00:10niche for hematopoietic stem cells.
- 00:12There are multiple components of
- 00:14this. We have blood vessels.
- 00:15We have cardiovascular cells, stromal
- 00:18cells,
- 00:19fat cells,
- 00:20nerve cells, and and so
- 00:21many more. And all these
- 00:23components
- 00:24govern
- 00:24and dictate the fate of
- 00:27an hematopoietic stem
- 00:30cell.
- 00:32Hematopoietic stem cells have the
- 00:33potential to create and regenerate
- 00:36all the blood cells in
- 00:37our body. My lab works
- 00:39on specialized
- 00:40bone marrow micro
- 00:43which govern these hematopoic stem
- 00:45cells in different cranial facial
- 00:47bones in our head.
- 00:48So before I started my
- 00:50lab,
- 00:51I discovered that the skull
- 00:52bone marrow micro environment is
- 00:54very different
- 00:55from other bone marrow compartments.
- 00:57But there are twenty three
- 00:59different cranial facial bones in
- 01:00our head. So my lab
- 01:03is trying to find out
- 01:04how functionally unique and specialized
- 01:07these bone marrow microenvironments
- 01:08are. And we're trying to
- 01:10figure out ultimately figure out
- 01:11why we have cranial facial
- 01:13bone marrow and why we
- 01:14need to have so many
- 01:15of them.
- 01:17As you know, we have
- 01:18severe bone loss during aging.
- 01:20But it's not only the
- 01:21bone that ages, the bone
- 01:23marrow also ages.
- 01:24We
- 01:25lose blood vessels in the
- 01:27bone marrow as we age.
- 01:28There's an excessive accumulation of
- 01:30fat cells, which directly inhibit
- 01:33normal hematopoic stem cell activity,
- 01:35and the environment becomes very
- 01:37inflammatory
- 01:38during aging.
- 01:40Most of these studies have
- 01:42been done in long bones
- 01:43in our arms and legs.
- 01:45And I found that the
- 01:46skull bone marrow is actually
- 01:48going in the opposite direction.
- 01:50It's actually growing and staying
- 01:52healthy in function.
- 01:57We're using innovative imaging methods
- 01:59like in vivo labeling with
- 02:00fluorescence conjugated antibodies
- 02:02to
- 02:03image these different cranial facial
- 02:05bones in its entirety.
- 02:07And we're using skull transplantation
- 02:10to assess
- 02:11specialized contribution
- 02:12from different cranial facial bones.
- 02:14We're also using intravital imaging
- 02:17to track tissue morphogenesis,
- 02:19and we're using also very
- 02:21creative methods of partial irradiation
- 02:24to assess their hematopoiet
- 02:26contribution to systemic circulation.
- 02:31Now we know that the
- 02:33skull bone marrow is continuously
- 02:35in communication with what's happening
- 02:36in the CNS in our
- 02:38brain.
- 02:39We don't know yet which
- 02:41bone marrow microenvironments are contributing
- 02:44to the neuroinflammation
- 02:46and
- 02:46subsequent neurodegeneration.
- 02:49So we're hoping to find
- 02:52novel therapeutic targets within cranial,
- 02:54facial, bone marrow that we
- 02:55could employ
- 02:57to treat neurodegenerative
- 02:59diseases like Alzheimer's or neuroinflammatory
- 03:01diseases like multiple sclerosis.