Lineage tracing reveals fate bias and transcriptional memory in human B cells

Author:

Swift Michael1ORCID,Horns Felix2,Quake Stephen R345

Affiliation:

1. Department of Chemical and Systems Biology, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, USA

2. Division of Biology and Bioengineering, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, CA, USA

3. Department of Bioengineering, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, USA

4. Department of Applied Physics, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, USA

5. Chan Zuckerberg Biohub, San Francisco, CA, USA

Abstract

We combined single-cell transcriptomics and lineage tracing to understand fate choice in human B cells. Using the antibody sequences of B cells, we tracked clones during in vitro differentiation. Clonal analysis revealed a subset of IgM+ B cells which were more proliferative than other B-cell types. Whereas the population of B cells adopted diverse states during differentiation, clones had a restricted set of fates available to them; there were two times more single-fate clones than expected given population-level cell-type diversity. This implicated a molecular memory of initial cell states that was propagated through differentiation. We then identified the genes which had strongest coherence within clones. These genes significantly overlapped known B-cell fate determination programs, suggesting the genes which determine cell identity are most robustly controlled on a clonal level. Persistent clonal identities were also observed in human plasma cells from bone marrow, indicating that these transcriptional programs maintain long-term cell identities in vivo. Thus, we show how cell-intrinsic fate bias influences differentiation outcomes in vitro and in vivo.

Publisher

Life Science Alliance, LLC

Subject

Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis,Plant Science,Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology (miscellaneous),Ecology

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