Author:
Feng Cong,Tie Ruxiu,Xin Saige,Chen Yuhao,Li Sida,Chen Yifan,Hu Xiaotian,Zhou Yincong,Liu Yongjing,Hu Yueming,Hu Yanshi,Pan Hang,Wu Zexu,Chao Haoyu,Zhang Shilong,Ni Qingyang,Huang Jinyan,Luo Wenda,Huang He,Chen Ming
Abstract
Abstract
Background
The endothelial-to-hematopoietic transition (EHT) process during definitive hematopoiesis is highly conserved in vertebrates. Stage-specific expression of transposable elements (TEs) has been detected during zebrafish EHT and may promote hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) formation by activating inflammatory signaling. However, little is known about how TEs contribute to the EHT process in human and mouse.
Results
We reconstructed the single-cell EHT trajectories of human and mouse and resolved the dynamic expression patterns of TEs during EHT. Most TEs presented a transient co-upregulation pattern along the conserved EHT trajectories, coinciding with the temporal relaxation of epigenetic silencing systems. TE products can be sensed by multiple pattern recognition receptors, triggering inflammatory signaling to facilitate HSC emergence. Interestingly, we observed that hypoxia-related signals were enriched in cells with higher TE expression. Furthermore, we constructed the hematopoietic cis-regulatory network of accessible TEs and identified potential TE-derived enhancers that may boost the expression of specific EHT marker genes.
Conclusions
Our study provides a systematic vision of how TEs are dynamically controlled to promote the hematopoietic fate decisions through transcriptional and cis-regulatory networks, and pre-train the immunity of nascent HSCs.
Funder
National Natural Sciences Foundation of China
National Key Research and Development Program of China
the Science and Technology Innovation Leading Scientist
151 Talent Project of Zhejiang Province
Postdoctoral Fellowship Program of CPSF
Natural Science Foundation of Shanxi Province
Doctor Foundation of The Second Hospital of Shanxi Medical University
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC