Highly proliferative primitive fetal liver hematopoietic stem cells are fueled by oxidative metabolic pathways

Javed K. Manesia(Leuven Institute for Fertility and Embryology), Zhuofei Xu(Leuven Institute for Fertility and Embryology), Dorien Broekaert(Leuven Institute for Fertility and Embryology), Ruben Boon(KU Leuven), Alexander R. van Vliet(KU Leuven), Guy Eelen(VIB-KU Leuven Center for Cancer Biology), Thomas Vanwelden(Leuven Institute for Fertility and Embryology), Steve Stegen(KU Leuven), Nick van Gastel(KU Leuven), Alberto Pascual-Montano(Centro Nacional de Biotecnología), Sarah‐Maria Fendt(KU Leuven), Geert Carmeliet(KU Leuven), Peter Carmeliet(VIB-KU Leuven Center for Cancer Biology), Satish Khurana(Leuven Institute for Fertility and Embryology), Catherine M. Verfaillie(KU Leuven)
Stem Cell Research
November 1, 2015
Cited by 104Open Access
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Abstract

Hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) in the fetal liver (FL) unlike adult bone marrow (BM) proliferate extensively, posing different metabolic demands. However, metabolic pathways responsible for the production of energy and cellular building blocks in FL HSCs have not been described. Here, we report that FL HSCs use oxygen dependent energy generating pathways significantly more than their BM counterparts. RNA-Seq analysis of E14.5 FL versus BM derived HSCs identified increased expression levels of genes involved in oxidative phosphorylation (OxPhos) and the citric acid cycle (TCA). We demonstrated that FL HSCs contain more mitochondria than BM HSCs, which resulted in increased levels of oxygen consumption and reactive oxygen species (ROS) production. Higher levels of DNA repair and antioxidant pathway gene expression may prevent ROS-mediated (geno)toxicity in FL HSCs. Thus, we here for the first time highlight the underestimated importance of oxygen dependent pathways for generating energy and building blocks in FL HSCs.


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