Human haematopoietic stem cell lineage commitment is a continuous process
造血
生物
干细胞
祖细胞
细胞生物学
谱系(遗传)
细胞分化
祖细胞
免疫学
遗传学
基因
作者
Lars Velten,Simon Haas,Simon Raffel,Sandra Blaszkiewicz,Saiful Islam,Bianca P. Hennig,Christoph Hirche,Christoph Lutz,Eike C. Buss,Daniel Nowak,Tobias Boch,Wolf-Karsten Hofmann,Anthony D. Ho,Wolfgang Huber,Andreas Trumpp,Marieke Essers,Lars M. Steinmetz
Blood formation is believed to occur through stepwise progression of haematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) following a tree-like hierarchy of oligo-, bi- and unipotent progenitors. However, this model is based on the analysis of predefined flow-sorted cell populations. Here we integrated flow cytometric, transcriptomic and functional data at single-cell resolution to quantitatively map early differentiation of human HSCs towards lineage commitment. During homeostasis, individual HSCs gradually acquire lineage biases along multiple directions without passing through discrete hierarchically organized progenitor populations. Instead, unilineage-restricted cells emerge directly from a 'continuum of low-primed undifferentiated haematopoietic stem and progenitor cells' (CLOUD-HSPCs). Distinct gene expression modules operate in a combinatorial manner to control stemness, early lineage priming and the subsequent progression into all major branches of haematopoiesis. These data reveal a continuous landscape of human steady-state haematopoiesis downstream of HSCs and provide a basis for the understanding of haematopoietic malignancies.