Clonal origin of haematopoietic colonies in the postnatal mouse liver
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Since the early 1980s, developing haematopoietic cells have been categorised into three well-defined compartments: multi-potent haematopoietic stem cells (HSC), which are able to self-renew, followed by haematopoietic progenitor cells (HPC), which undergo decision-making and age as they divide rather than self-renew, and the final compartment of functional blood and immune cells. The classic model of haematopoiesis divides cells into two families, myeloid and lymphoid, and dictates a route to a particular cell fate. New discoveries question these long-held principles, including: (i) the identification of lineage-biased cells that self-renew; (ii) a strict myeloid/lymphoid dichotomy is refuted by the existence of progenitors with lymphoid potential and an incomplete set of myeloid potentials; (iii) there are multiple routes to some end cell types; and (iv) thymocyte progenitor cells that have progressed some way along this pathway retain clandestine myeloid options. In essence, the progeny of HSC are more versatile and the process of haematopoiesis is more flexible than previously thought. Here we examine this new way of viewing haematopoiesis and the impact of rewriting an account of haematopoiesis on our understanding of what goes awry in leukaemia.
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Abstract Myeloid-biased hematopoiesis is a well-known age-related alteration. Several possibilities, including myeloid-biased hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) clones, may explain this. However, the precise mechanisms remain controversial. Utilizing the Hoxb5 reporter system to prospectively isolate long-term HSCs (LT-HSCs) and short-term HSCs (ST-HSCs), we found that young and aged LT-HSCs co-transplanted into the same recipients demonstrated nearly equivalent myeloid lineage output, contrary to the theory of myeloid-biased HSC clones. Transcriptomics indicated no significant myeloid gene enrichment in aged LT-HSCs compared to their young counterparts. Instead, transplanting reconstituted young HSCs with the ratio of LT/ST-HSCs seen in aged mice can significantly skew the lineage output to myeloid cells. In addition, while the niche environment in the bone marrow minimally affects myeloid-biased hematopoiesis, aged thymi and spleens substantially hinder lymphoid hematopoiesis, resulting in further myeloid-domination. Thus, we demonstrate that myeloid-biased hematopoiesis in aged organisms originates due to alteration of the ratio between LT-HSCs and ST-HSCs rather than in heterogeneous HSC clones with various cell fates.
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The hierarchical model of hematopoiesis posits that self-renewing, multipotent hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) give rise to all blood cell lineages. While this model accounts for hematopoiesis in transplant settings, its applicability to steady-state hematopoiesis remains to be clarified. Here, we used inducible clonal DNA barcoding of endogenous adult HSCs to trace their contribution to major hematopoietic cell lineages in unmanipulated animals. While the majority of barcodes were unique to a single lineage, we also observed frequent barcode sharing between multiple lineages, specifically between lymphocytes and myeloid cells. These results suggest that both single-lineage and multilineage contributions by HSCs collectively drive continuous hematopoiesis, and highlight a close relationship of myeloid and lymphoid development.
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Much of this essay is a cautionary tale about the inherent difficulty of building theories to explain pattern formation in embryos. In particular, I discuss the relationship between cell state and cell lineage. The idea that embryonic cells can occupy discrete genetic states is an old one but, because of the mass of new information from Drosophila developmental genetics, it has been given new life. I propose an operational definition of a cell state and argue that a true cell state should be propagated faithfully through cell lineage for at least some divisions. The genes involved should have a controlling role and the borders between populations of cells in two different states should be so sharp that cells fall clearly into one state or another.
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Morphologic analysis of hemopoietic tissue in mouse liver reveals the persistence of erythropoietic, granulopoietic, and lymphopoietic activity for approximately 2 wk after birth. Near the end of the first postnatal week, we noted a remarkable reorganization of the hemopoietic cells that was characterized by a transition from a diffuse distribution of mixed erythroid, myeloid, and lymphoid elements to a focal pattern of discrete hemopoietic colonies scattered among the cords of hepatic parenchymal cells. Each hemopoietic focus contained cells progressing along a single differentiation pathway (i.e., erythroid, myeloid, or lymphoid cells). Megakaryocytes were seen as solitary cells surrounded by hepatocytes. This pattern of colonization was observed in all strains of mice examined. In the livers of mice with known hemopoietic defects, however, differences were found in the duration of postnatal hemopoiesis. Accessory cells with macrophage-like features were consistently observed in erythropoietic foci, but were rarely seen in lymphoid foci. The latter were formed by pre-B cells identifiable by the presence of cytoplasmic mu-heavy chains and the absence of light chain expression. The occurrence of discrete colonies of erythroid, myeloid, and pre-B lymphoid cells in the postnatal liver suggests that each is derived from a single, committed precursor cell. This anatomical compartmentalization according to cell type offers a useful model system for analysis of hemopoietic differentiation and of the generation of clonal diversity among B lineage cells.
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