Abstract
AbstractIn classic ‘ball-and-stick’ models of haematopoiesis the implicit assumption is that all cells within each defined stem or progenitor cell population are equivalent in their fate. Instead, more recent models suggest a haematopoietic stem and progenitor cell (HSPC) ‘continuum’ of lineage bias and commitment, which is largely inferred through ‘snapshot’ analysis of single cell gene expression or clonal fate. However, the dynamic assessment of lineage commitment of specific HSPC populations and their clonal output over timein vivois still lacking but is essential to fully inform accurate models of haematopoiesis. Here, using cellular barcoding we compare the single cell output of long-term haematopoietic stem cells (LT-HSCs), short-term HSCs (ST-HSCs), multipotent progenitors (LMPPs), common myeloid progenitors (CMPs), common lymphoid progenitors (CLPs), and macrophage/dendritic cell progenitors (MDPs). Each population was assessed for their output to multiple haematopoietic cell types spanning a subset of time points from 9 to 112 days of haematopoiesis after transplantation. These analyses revealed a wide range of clonal fate patterns that were inconsistent with their eponymous labels, i.e. stem and multipotent progenitors were rarely multi- or equipotent, and ‘common’ progenitors were often highly restricted in their fate. To better describe how these clonal patterns integrate into a revised landscape, a novel agent-based mathematical modelling approach that explicitly accounts for haematopoiesis at a clonal level was developed to allow the simulation of growth, timing and branching of clonal trajectories that underlie the process. Rather than a continuum, the proposed model is suggestive of multiple tracks down which clonal trajectories progress, and where fate can branch to a track of lower potency at multiple points down the entire cascade of haematopoiesis.Graphical abstractIn a multi-track model, while some HSPCs are multipotent and branch into daughters with committed fate (left trajectory), other HSPCs may already committed or biased to a certain lineage such that their daughters inherit and maintain it in subsequent divisions during haematopoiesis. However, this commitment/fate bias is not evident through current phenotypic definitions of HSPC subsets (background colour) but occurs through putative expression of transcription factors, epigenetic programming or other factor that is currently unresolved (as indicated by the coloured fate potential triangles inside cells).
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
1 articles.
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