Chronic Infection Depletes Hematopoietic Stem Cells through Stress-Induced Terminal Differentiation

Katie A. Matatall(Baylor College of Medicine), Mira Jeong(Baylor College of Medicine), Siyi Chen(Rice University), Deqiang Sun(Texas A&M Health Science Center), Fengju Chen(Baylor College of Medicine), Qianxing Mo(Children's Cancer Center), Marek Kimmel(Silesian University of Technology), Katherine Y. King(Baylor College of Medicine)
Cell Reports
December 1, 2016
Cited by 271Open Access
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Abstract

Chronic infections affect a third of the world's population and can cause bone marrow suppression, a severe condition that increases mortality from infection. To uncover the basis for infection-associated bone marrow suppression, we conducted repeated infection of WT mice with Mycobacterium avium. After 4-6 months, mice became pancytopenic. Their hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells (HSPCs) were severely depleted and displayed interferon gamma (IFN-γ) signaling-dependent defects in self-renewal. There was no evidence of increased HSPC mobilization or apoptosis. However, consistent with known effects of IFN-γ, transcriptome analysis pointed toward increased myeloid differentiation of HSPCs and revealed the transcription factor Batf2 as a potential mediator of IFN-γ-induced HSPC differentiation. Gain- and loss-of-function studies uncovered a role for Batf2 in myeloid differentiation in both murine and human systems. We thus demonstrate that chronic infection can deplete HSPCs and identify BATF2 as a mediator of infection-induced HSPC terminal differentiation.


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