Limited rejuvenation of aged hematopoietic stem cells in young bone marrow niche

Wakako Kuribayashi(Chiba University), Motohiko Oshima(The University of Tokyo), Naoki Itokawa(Chiba University), Shuhei Koide(The University of Tokyo), Yaeko Nakajima‐Takagi(The University of Tokyo), Masayuki Yamashita(The University of Tokyo), Satoshi Yamazaki(University of Tsukuba), Bahityar Rahmutulla(Chiba University), Fumihito Miura(Kyushu University), Takashi Ito(Kyushu University), Atsushi Kaneda(Chiba University), Atsushi Iwama(Chiba University)
The Journal of Experimental Medicine
November 24, 2020
Cited by 111Open Access
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Abstract

Hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) exhibit functional alterations, such as reduced regenerative capacity and myeloid-biased differentiation, with age. The HSC niche, which is essential for the maintenance of HSCs, also undergoes marked changes with aging. However, it has been technically challenging to directly evaluate the contribution of niche aging to age-associated HSC alterations without niche-damaging myeloablation in HSC transplantation assays. We herein transplanted an excess of aged HSCs into young mice without preconditioning. Although aged HSCs successfully engrafted in the intact young bone marrow niche, they poorly regenerated downstream progenitors and exhibited persistent myeloid-biased differentiation, resulting in no significant functional rejuvenation. Transcriptome and methylome analyses revealed that the young niche largely restored the transcriptional profile of aged HSCs, but not their DNA methylation profiles. Therefore, the restoration of the young niche is insufficient for rejuvenating HSC functions, highlighting a key role for age-associated cell-intrinsic defects in HSC aging.


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