Myelo-lymphoid lineage restriction occurs in the human haematopoietic stem cell compartment before lymphoid-primed multipotent progenitors

Serena Belluschi(Wellcome/MRC Cambridge Stem Cell Institute), Emily F. Calderbank(Wellcome/MRC Cambridge Stem Cell Institute), Valerio Ciaurro(Wellcome/MRC Cambridge Stem Cell Institute), Blanca Pijuan-Sala(Wellcome/MRC Cambridge Stem Cell Institute), Antonella Santoro(Wellcome/MRC Cambridge Stem Cell Institute), Nicole Mende(Wellcome/MRC Cambridge Stem Cell Institute), Evangelia Diamanti(Wellcome/MRC Cambridge Stem Cell Institute), Kendig Sham(Wellcome/MRC Cambridge Stem Cell Institute), Xiaonan Wang(Wellcome/MRC Cambridge Stem Cell Institute), Winnie Lau(Wellcome/MRC Cambridge Stem Cell Institute), Wajid Jawaid(Wellcome/MRC Cambridge Stem Cell Institute), Berthold Göttgens(Wellcome/MRC Cambridge Stem Cell Institute), Elisa Laurenti(Wellcome/MRC Cambridge Stem Cell Institute)
Nature Communications
October 1, 2018
Cited by 108Open Access
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Abstract

Abstract Capturing where and how multipotency is lost is crucial to understand how blood formation is controlled. Blood lineage specification is currently thought to occur downstream of multipotent haematopoietic stem cells (HSC). Here we show that, in human, the first lineage restriction events occur within the CD19 − CD34 + CD38 − CD45RA − CD49f + CD90 + (49f + ) HSC compartment to generate myelo-lymphoid committed cells with no erythroid differentiation capacity. At single-cell resolution, we observe a continuous but polarised organisation of the 49f + compartment, where transcriptional programmes and lineage potential progressively change along a gradient of opposing cell surface expression of CLEC9A and CD34. CLEC9A hi CD34 lo cells contain long-term repopulating multipotent HSCs with slow quiescence exit kinetics, whereas CLEC9A lo CD34 hi cells are restricted to myelo-lymphoid differentiation and display infrequent but durable repopulation capacity. We thus propose that human HSCs gradually transition to a discrete lymphoid-primed state, distinct from lymphoid-primed multipotent progenitors, representing the earliest entry point into lymphoid commitment.


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