| Literature DB >> 31555276 |
Federica Bozzano1, Carola Perrone2, Lorenzo Moretta1, Andrea De Maria2,3,4.
Abstract
NK cells are generated from hematopoietic stem cells (HSC) residing in the bone marrow (BM), similar to other blood cells. Development toward mature NK cells occurs largely outside the BM through travel of CD34+ and other progenitor intermediates toward secondary lymphoid organs. The BM harbors multipotent CD34+ common lymphoid progenitors (CLPs) that generate T, B, NK, and Dendritic Cells and are devoid of erythroid, myeloid, and megakaryocytic potential. Over recent years, there has been a quest for single-lineage progenitors predominantly with the objective of manipulation and intervention in mind, which has led to the identification of unipotent NK cell progenitors devoid of other lymphoid lineage potential. Research efforts for the study of lymphopoiesis have almost exclusively concentrated on healthy donor tissues and on repopulation/transplant models. This has led to the widely accepted assumption that lymphopoiesis during disease states reflects the findings of these models. However, compelling evidences in animal models show that inflammation plays a fundamental role in the regulation of HSC maturation and release in the BM niches through several mechanisms including modulation of the CXCL12-CXCR4 expression. Indeed, recent findings during systemic inflammation in patients provide evidence that a so-far overlooked CLP exists in the BM (Lin-CD34+DNAM-1brightCXCR4+) and that it overwhelmingly exits the BM during systemic inflammation. These "inflammatory" precursors have a developmental trajectory toward surprisingly functional NK and T cells as reviewed here and mirror the steady state maintenance of the NK cell pool by CD34+DNAM-1-CXCR4- precursors. Our understanding of NK cell precursor development may benefit from including a distinct "inflammatory" progenitor modeling of lymphoid precursors, allowing rapid deployment of specialized Lin-CD34+DNAM-1brightCXCR4+ -derived resources from the BM.Entities:
Keywords: CD34+ precursors; CXCR4; DNAM-1; NK cells; common lymphoid precursor; inflammation
Year: 2019 PMID: 31555276 PMCID: PMC6724745 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2019.02045
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1NK cell hematopoiesis in health and during systemic inflammation. A section of Bone Marrow with a sinusoid is represented. Vascular Niche in pink, osteoblast niche representation in yellow. Blue cells represent CXCR4- lymphoid or erythroid cells passively released in the sinusoid. A spectrum of the phenotypes of so far characterized CD34+ NK cell precursors is represented with reported progenies and is indicated by citation numbers. (A) Diagram of the Stem Cell Niche and NK cell precursors in Healthy Adult Bone Marrow. Lymphoid cells and precursors exiting passively from sinusoids are indicated by dark blue arrows and constitute the pool of CD34+ cells circulating in peripheral blood. A yellow box defines their trajectory toward SLT (CD62L+CCR7+) and the prevailing phenotype of NK cells grown under standard conditions in vitro. (B) The Stem Cell Niche and CD34+ NK cell precursors in Adult Bone Marrow during chronic inflammation. During chronic inflammation, inflammatory cytokines and mediators determine a reduction/shutdown of CXCL12 signaling within the BM niches, with decreased retention ability of CXCR4+ HSC and CLP that otherwise populate the BM but do not circulate in PB. Red arrows show “inflammatory” or “emergency” CD34+ cells exting the BM. A different composition of CD34+ peripheral blood pool is accordingly shown during inflammatory conditions (HIV, HCV, COPD, Tuberculosis, PAPA). Travel trajectories of Lin−CD34+DNAM-1brightCXCR4+ cells toward peripheral tissues are shown as these CD34+ CLPa express CX3CR1+, CXCR1+, CXCR3+, in addition to SLT-homing receptors (CD62L+CCR7+).