The outlook for patients with acute myeloid leukemia has improved over the past years but still more than half of younger adults and about 90% of elderly patients diagnosed with AML die from the disease. Disease relapse is a main cause of death, and hematopoietic stem cell transplantation the best treatment option for inducing cure.
While the genetic landscape of acute myeloid leukemia cells has been widely studied, the mechanisms driving disease relapse remain ill-defined. Relapse is thought to occur from subpopulations of leukemic cells with stem cell properties. These so-called leukemic stem cells reside in the bone marrow and require close interactions with the microenvironment and other extracellular components for their maintenance and expansion. In this project, we further investigate the of leukemic stem cells with the bone marrow and with healthy hematopoietic cells that naturally locate there. The overall aim of is to identify, based on this knowledge, novel therapeutic strategies that can improve stem cell transplantation therapies and pave the way for their clinical translation to patients.