| Literature DB >> 25139854 |
Anna Liakhovitskaia1, Stanislav Rybtsov1, Tom Smith1, Antoniana Batsivari1, Natalia Rybtsova1, Christina Rode2, Marella de Bruijn2, Frank Buchholz3, Sabrina Gordon-Keylock1, Suling Zhao1, Alexander Medvinsky4.
Abstract
Haematopoiesis in adult animals is maintained by haematopoietic stem cells (HSCs), which self-renew and can give rise to all blood cell lineages. The AGM region is an important intra-embryonic site of HSC development and a wealth of evidence indicates that HSCs emerge from the endothelium of the embryonic dorsal aorta and extra-embryonic large arteries. This, however, is a stepwise process that occurs through sequential upregulation of CD41 and CD45 followed by emergence of fully functional definitive HSCs. Although largely dispensable at later stages, the Runx1 transcription factor is crucially important during developmental maturation of HSCs; however, exact points of crucial involvement of Runx1 in this multi-step developmental maturation process remain unclear. Here, we have investigated requirements for Runx1 using a conditional reversible knockout strategy. We report that Runx1 deficiency does not preclude formation of VE-cad+CD45-CD41+ cells, which are phenotypically equivalent to precursors of definitive HSCs (pre-HSC Type I) but blocks transition to the subsequent CD45+ stage (pre-HSC Type II). These data emphasise that developmental progression of HSCs during a very short period of time is regulated by precise stage-specific molecular mechanisms.Entities:
Keywords: AGM region; CD41; HSC; Mouse; Runx1
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25139854 PMCID: PMC4199125 DOI: 10.1242/dev.110841
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Development ISSN: 0950-1991 Impact factor: 6.868
Fig. 1.(A) CD41 (left panel) and CD45 (right panel) mRNA are detected in wild-type and Runx1 knockout embryos by RT-PCR. E9.5 Runx1 knockout body and yolk sac (YS) (lanes 1 and 2, respectively); E9.5 wild-type body and YS (lanes 3 and 4, respectively); E11.5 Runx1 knockout and wild-type YS (lanes 5 and 6, respectively); H20 control (lane 7). (B) Flow cytometry analysis of Runx1 heterozygous, Runx1 knockout [Runx1LacZ/Δ] and rescued [CD41-Cre::Runx1LacZ/Δ] embryos (E10.5 AGM regions) obtained through crossing as outlined in supplementary material Fig. S1. (Top row) Runx1wt/Δ and rescued Runx1Re/Δ embryos contain both CD41lo and CD41hi cells; however, knockout Runx1LacZ/Δ embryos develop mainly CD41lo cells (7AAD+Ter119+ cells are excluded). (Middle row) Runx1LacZ/Δ embryos contain VEcad+CD45−CD41lo cells bearing the pre-HSCs Type I phenotype (7AAD+Ter119+VE-cad- cells are excluded). (Bottom row) CD45+ cells are absent in Runx1 knockout embryos but are rescued in [CD41-Cre::Runx1lLacZ/Δ] embryos (7AAD+Ter119+ cells are excluded). (C) CD41+ and CD31+ cells in the E10.5 dorsal aorta of wild-type and Runx1LacZ/Δ knockout embryos (confocal microscopy). Scale bars: 50 µm.
Fig. 2.Development of haematopoietic cells in (A) Representative plots of annexin V staining in CD41+Ter119− cells in E10.5 AGM regions (7AAD+Ter119+CD41− cells were gated out). (Top) The CD41lo population in Runx1LacZ/Δ embryos contains a smaller proportion of annexin V+ cells than in heterozygous Runx1Δ/wt embryos (red line separates CD41lo and CD41hi subsets); the same tendency but to a smaller degree is observed in the CD41hi population. (Bottom) Proportion of annexin V+ cells in CD41lo and CD41hi fractions in knockout Runx1LacZ/Δ and control Runx1Δ/wt E10.5 AGM regions. Each circle represents an individual embryo. Data were obtained from five independent experiments. (B) Active caspase 3 expression in intra-aortic haematopoietic clusters in the wild-type E11.5 AGM region (confocal microscopy). Dotted lines show the endothelial lining of the dorsal aorta. D-V and A-P indicate the dorsoventral and anterioposterior axes, respectively.
Fig. 3.HSCs are rescued in [CD41-Cre::Runx1 (A) Experimental design: left, transplantation of E14.5 foetal livers; right, transplantation of fresh and cultured E11.5 AGM regions. (B-D) Long-term donor-derived haematopoietic repopulation with (B) E14.5 foetal livers from control Runx1wt/Δ and rescued Runx1Re/Δ embryos; (C) uncultured E11.5 AGM region cells; and (D) cultured E11.5 AGM region cells. The donor cell contribution (%) into the peripheral blood of recipient mice is shown (for details of culture, transplantation and analysis, see Materials and Methods). Each symbol represents one recipient mouse. Data obtained from three independent experiments. (E) Representative examples of long-term multilineage donor-derived haematopoietic repopulation ([CD41-Cre::Runx1LacZ/Δ] E14.5 foetal liver, 14 weeks post-transplantation). Gating was carried out on 7AAD-Ly5.2+ cells.