| Literature DB >> 24141110 |
Parisa Imanirad1, Parham Solaimani Kartalaei1, Mihaela Crisan1, Chris Vink1, Tomoko Yamada-Inagawa1, Emma de Pater1, Dorota Kurek1, Polynikis Kaimakis1, Reiner van der Linden1, Nancy Speck2, Elaine Dzierzak3.
Abstract
Hypoxia affects many physiologic processes during early stages of mammalian ontogeny, particularly placental and vascular development. In the adult, the hypoxic bone marrow microenvironment plays a role in regulating hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) function. HSCs are generated from the major vasculature of the embryo, but whether the hypoxic response affects the generation of these HSCs is as yet unknown. Here we examined whether Hypoxia Inducible Factor1-alpha (HIF1α), a key modulator of the response to hypoxia, is essential for HSC development. We found hypoxic cells in embryonic tissues that generate and expand hematopoietic cells (aorta, placenta and fetal liver), and specifically aortic endothelial and hematopoietic cluster cells. A Cre/loxP conditional knockout (cKO) approach was taken to delete HIF1α in Vascular Endothelial-Cadherin expressing endothelial cells, the precursors to definitive hematopoietic cells. Functional assays show that HSC and hematopoietic progenitor cells (HPCs) are significantly reduced in cKO aorta and placenta. Moreover, decreases in phenotypic aortic hematopoietic cluster cells in cKO embryos indicate that HIF1α is necessary for generation and/or expansion of HPCs and HSCs. cKO adult BM HSCs are also affected under transplantation conditions. Thus, HIF1α is a regulator of HSC generation and function beginning at the earliest embryonic stages.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 24141110 PMCID: PMC3964602 DOI: 10.1016/j.scr.2013.09.006
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stem Cell Res ISSN: 1873-5061 Impact factor: 2.020