| Literature DB >> 30902922 |
Abstract
The first definitive blood cells during embryogenesis are derived from endothelial cells in a highly conserved process known as endothelial-to-haematopoietic transition (EHT). This conversion involves activation of a haematopoietic transcriptional programme in a subset of endothelial cells in the major vasculature of the embryo, followed by major morphological changes that result in transitioning cells rounding up, breaking the tight junctions to neighbouring endothelial cells and adopting a haematopoietic fate. The whole process is co-ordinated by a complex interplay of key transcription factors and signalling pathways, with additional input from surrounding tissues. Diverse model systems, including mouse, chick and zebrafish embryos as well as differentiation of pluripotent cells in vitro, have contributed to the elucidation of the details of the EHT, which was greatly accelerated in recent years by sophisticated live imaging techniques and advances in transcriptional profiling, such as single-cell RNA-Seq. A detailed knowledge of these developmental events is required in order to be able to apply it to the generation of haematopoietic stem cells from pluripotent stem cells in vitro - an achievement which is of obvious clinical importance. The aim of this review is to summarise the latest findings and describe how these may have contributed towards achieving this goal.Entities:
Keywords: aorta-gonads-mesonephros; developmental haematopoiesis; endothelial-to-haematopoietic transition; haematopoietic stem cells; haemogenic endothelium
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30902922 PMCID: PMC6490701 DOI: 10.1042/BST20180320
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biochem Soc Trans ISSN: 0300-5127 Impact factor: 5.407
Figure 1.Stepwise formation of HSPCs from endothelial cells.
Depicted are the morphological events thought to take place in the dorsal aorta of the mouse embryo during the formation of HSPCs. Up-regulation of a haematopoietic transcriptional programme in endothelial cells during the specification of HECs is marked by a light red colour. EHT is characterised by a shape change towards a rounder cell with further implementation of a haematopoietic programme and breaking of tight junctions with neighbouring endothelial cells. HECs giving rise to pro-HSCs and pre-HSCs is thought to result in the formation of intra-aortic clusters in which cells mature into haematopoietic stem and progenitor cells as they colonise the foetal liver.
Figure 2.The regulation of EHT.
Key transcription factors involved in the EHT are shown in red and key signalling pathways in green. Cell surface markers characteristic for each stage are shown in purple. Whether a gene is up-regulated or down-regulated during the process is highlighted by its position above or below the schematic, respectively.
Phenotype of cell populations analysed by transcriptional profiling
| Cell population | Phenotype | Stage | Profiling | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Non-HECs | Runx1 + 23GFP−Cdh5+Ter119−CD45−CD41− | E8.5, E9.25, E10.5 | Microarrays and scqRT-PCR | [ |
| Non-HECs | Ly6a-GFP−CD31+ckit− | E10.5 | Bulk RNA-Seq | [ |
| GFP+ ECs | Ly6a-GFP+CD31+Cdh5+Esam+ckit− | E10.5 | Bulk RNA-Seq | [ |
| Trunk HECs | 26–28 hpf | Bulk RNA-Seq | [ | |
| ECs | CD31+Cdh5+CD41−CD43−CD45−Ter119− | E11.5 | 10-cell and scRNA-Seq | [ |
| HCCs | ckit+ | E11.5 | scRNA-Seq | [ |
| ECs-HSPCs | Cdh5+ | E10.5 | scRNA-Seq | [ |
Abbreviations: EC, endothelial cell; EHT, endothelial-to-haematopoietic transition; FL, foetal liver; HEC, haemogenic endothelial cell; HCC, haematopoietic cluster cell; HPC, haematopoietic progenitor cell; hpf, hours post fertilisation; HSC, haematopoietic stem cell; HSPC, haematopoietic stem/progenitor cell; sc, single cell; YS, yolk sac.