Epigenetic programming defines haematopoietic stem cell fate restriction

Yiran Meng(John Radcliffe Hospital), Joana Carrelha(John Radcliffe Hospital), Roy Drissen(John Radcliffe Hospital), Xiying Ren(John Radcliffe Hospital), Bowen Zhang(John Radcliffe Hospital), Adriana Rosa Gambardella(John Radcliffe Hospital), Simona Valletta(John Radcliffe Hospital), Supat Thongjuea(John Radcliffe Hospital), Sten Eirik W. Jacobsen(Karolinska University Hospital), Claus Nerlov(John Radcliffe Hospital)
Nature Cell Biology
May 1, 2023
Cited by 39Open Access
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Abstract

Haematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) are multipotent, but individual HSCs can show restricted lineage output in vivo. Currently, the molecular mechanisms and physiological role of HSC fate restriction remain unknown. Here we show that lymphoid fate is epigenetically but not transcriptionally primed in HSCs. In multi-lineage HSCs that produce lymphocytes, lymphoid-specific upstream regulatory elements (LymUREs) but not promoters are preferentially accessible compared with platelet-biased HSCs that do not produce lymphoid cell types, providing transcriptionally silent lymphoid lineage priming. Runx3 is preferentially expressed in multi-lineage HSCs, and reinstating Runx3 expression increases LymURE accessibility and lymphoid-primed multipotent progenitor 4 (MPP4) output in old, platelet-biased HSCs. In contrast, platelet-biased HSCs show elevated levels of epigenetic platelet-lineage priming and give rise to MPP2 progenitors with molecular platelet bias. These MPP2 progenitors generate platelets with faster kinetics and through a more direct cellular pathway compared with MPP2s derived from multi-lineage HSCs. Epigenetic programming therefore predicts both fate restriction and differentiation kinetics in HSCs.


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