| Literature DB >> 32252797 |
Xia Li1,2,3, Xiangjun Zeng1,2,3, Yulin Xu1,2,3, Binsheng Wang1,2,3, Yanmin Zhao1,2,3, Xiaoyu Lai1,2,3, Pengxu Qian1,2,3, He Huang4,5,6.
Abstract
Hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) aging, which is accompanied by reduced self-renewal ability, impaired homing, myeloid-biased differentiation, and other defects in hematopoietic reconstitution function, is a hot topic in stem cell research. Although the number of HSCs increases with age in both mice and humans, the increase cannot compensate for the defects of aged HSCs. Many studies have been performed from various perspectives to illustrate the potential mechanisms of HSC aging; however, the detailed molecular mechanisms remain unclear, blocking further exploration of aged HSC rejuvenation. To determine how aged HSC defects occur, we provide an overview of differences in the hallmarks, signaling pathways, and epigenetics of young and aged HSCs as well as of the bone marrow niche wherein HSCs reside. Notably, we summarize the very recent studies which dissect HSC aging at the single-cell level. Furthermore, we review the promising strategies for rejuvenating aged HSC functions. Considering that the incidence of many hematological malignancies is strongly associated with age, our HSC aging review delineates the association between functional changes and molecular mechanisms and may have significant clinical relevance.Entities:
Keywords: Aging; Epigenetics; Hematopoietic stem cells; Rejuvenation; Single-cell sequencing
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32252797 PMCID: PMC7137344 DOI: 10.1186/s13045-020-00864-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Hematol Oncol ISSN: 1756-8722 Impact factor: 17.388
Fig. 1Functional alterations and HSC aging mechanisms. Aging negatively affects HSC functions, including decreasing self-renewal ability and myeloid/platelet-biased differentiation and impairing implantation ability. The intrinsic mechanisms are illustrated at the gene level, signaling pathway level, and epigenetic level. HSC aging is accompanied by some cell surface markers being upregulated with age (such as CD28, CD38, CD41, CD47, CD62, CD 69, CD74, and CD81) and some being downregulated with age (such as CD27, CD34, CD37, CD44, CD48, CD52, CD63, CD79b, CD86, CD97, CD97b, and CD160). Furthermore, aged HSCs show different expression levels of specific genes. For example, Amp3, Anxa7, Ap3b1, SELP, Egr1, Arhgef12, and Cbfa2t1h are upregulated, and Flt3, Xab2, Rad52, Xrcc1, Sox17, Bcl11b, and Blnk are downregulated. In addition, some signaling pathways are activated/repressed during HSC aging, including the JAK/STAT-NF-κB-mTOR pathway, TGF-β pathway, Wnt pathway, and ROS and UPRmt pathway. Age-related epigenetic regulation includes DNMT1, DNMT3A, DNMT3B, H3K4me3, and H3K27me3. Extrinsic mechanisms include HSC-surrounding cells (including MSCs, neutrophils, megakaryocytes, and macrophages), cytokines (including IL-6 and IL-1B), enzymes (including caspase-1), and β-adrenergic nerve signaling (including increased β2-AR signaling and decreased β3-AR signaling). The red box indicates that the molecule is upregulated with age, and the green box indicates that the molecule is downregulated with age
Differences in DNA methylation and histone modification levels between young and aged HSCs
| Alterations with age | Functions | Author and year | |
|---|---|---|---|
| DNMT1 | Downregulated | Myeloid skewing and self-renewal defects | Beerman et al. 2013 [ Sun et al. 2014 [ Trowbridge et al. 2009 [ Broske et al. 2009 [ |
| DNMT3A | Downregulated | Lead to an increase in self-renewal with age at the expense of differentiation | Beerman et al. 2013 [ Sun et al. 2014 [ Challen et al. 2014 [ |
| DNMT3B | Downregulated | Lead to an even more severe arrest of HSC differentiation | Sun et al. 2014 [ Challen et al. 2014 [ |
| TET1 | Downregulated | Enhance HSC self-renewal; increase B cell production; develop B cell malignancies | Sun et al. 2014 [ Cimmino et al. 2015 [ |
| TET2 | Downregulated | Attenuate differentiation and lead to myeloid transformation and myeloid malignancies | Busque et al. 2012 [ Ko et al. 2011 [ |
| 5-mC | Not studied | Hypermethylation at promoters associated with lineage potential | Beerman et al. 2013 [ Oshima et al. 2014 [ |
| Not studied | Hypermethylation selectively targeting PRC2 and PU.1-binding sites | Beerman et al. 2013 [ Sun et al. 2014 [ Oshima et al. 2014 [ | |
| Not studied | Hypomethylation at the HSC fingerprint genes and rRNA genes | Busque et al. 2012 [ Oshima et al. 2014 [ | |
| 5-hmC | Downregulated | Not studied | Sun et al. 2014 [ |
| H3K4me3 | Upregulated | Alter promoter usage and upregulate some genes ( | Sun et al. 2014 [ |
| H3K27me3 | Upregulated | Alter promoter usage and downregulate | Sun et al. 2014 [ |
| H4K16ac | Downregulated | Downregulate nuclear polarity with age | Florian et al. 2012 [ Grigoryan et al. 2018 [ |
| H3K27ac | Downregulated | Link to leukocyte activation and apoptotic signaling | Grigoryan et al. 2018 [ Adelman et al. 2019 [ |
| H3K9me2 | Downregulated | Anchor lamina-associated domains to nuclear lamin A/C | Grigoryan et al. 2018 [ Towbin et al. 2012 [ |
| H3K4me1 | Downregulated | Link to myeloid and erythroid differentiation and functions | Adelman et al. 2019 [ |
| H3K23ac | Upregulated | Not studied | Cheung et al. 2018 [ |
| H2BS14ph | Upregulated | Not studied | Cheung et al. 2018 [ |
| H3K9me2 | Upregulated | Not studied | Cheung et al. 2018 [ |
Fig. 2Cell-extrinsic mechanisms of HSC aging involved in HSC-surrounding cells (including megakaryocytes, MSCs, macrophages, and neutrophils), cytokines and enzymes (including IL-6, IL-1B, and caspase-1). Disrupted β-adrenergic nerve signaling (increased β2-AR-IL6-mediated megakaryocyte differentiation and reduced β3-AR-Nos1 activity) is an important determinant of niche alterations during aging, resulting in impaired lymphoid differentiation and myeloid expansion. Dysfunction of aged marrow macrophages directs HSC platelet bias; aged mice have markedly more senescent neutrophils and higher levels of cytokines IL-1B and caspase-1 in their BM niche than young mice. The number of MSCs increases significantly during aging and is associated with replicative senescence and HSC homing
Recent single-cell studies on HSC aging at the genetic and epigenetic levels
| Author and year | Age of object | Methods | Conclusion |
|---|---|---|---|
| Kowalczyk et al. 2015 [ | Young mice: 2–3 months; 176/200 (each type) Aged mice: > 22 months; 176/200 (each type) LT-HSC: LSK CD150+CD48− ST-HSC: LSK CD150−CD48− MPP: LSK CD150−CD48+ | SMART-seq | Cell cycle-related genes dominated the transcriptome variability. There was a lower frequency of cells in the G1 phase among old long-term HSCs. |
| Grover et al. 2016 [ | Young mice: 2–3 months; 52/61 Aged mice: 20–25 months; 62/74 LSK CD150+CD48− | Fluidigm C1 single-cell AutoPrep system | The principal pathways enriched in young HSCs were involved in cell cycle progression, while those in old HSCs were involved in growth factor signaling. |
| Mann et al. 2018 [ | Young mice: 2–3 months; 124~186 (each type) Aged mice: 20–24 months; 124~186 (each type) LT-HSC: LSKCD150+CD48− ST-HSC: LSK CD150−CD48− MPP: LSK CD150−CD48+ | SMART-Seq2 | LT-HSCs from young and aged mice had differential responses to inflammatory challenge. CD61 was a marker of myeloid-biased LT-HSCs. |
| Frisch et al. 2019 [ | Young mice: 1.5–2 months Aged mice: 20–24 months LSK CD150+CD48−Flt3− | Fluidigm C1 single-cell AutoPrep system | Most aged LT-HSCs highly expressed megakaryocyte-biased genes, including |
| Oetjen et al. 2018 [ | Humans across an age range from 24~84 years 76,645/> 90,000 Mononuclear cells in BM | 10X genomics single-cell 3′ solution | The authors identified all the major BM mononuclear populations and age-associated changes in cell population frequencies. |
| Hennrich et al. 2018 [ | Young humans: < 30 years; 291 Aged humans: > 50 years; 228 CD34+ | SMART-seq2 | The mRNA levels of age-increased glycolytic enzymes were higher in myeloid-primed than in lymphoid-primed HSPCs. |
| Adelman et al. 2019 [ | Young humans: < 40 years; 338 Aged humans: > 60 years; 310 Lin-CD34+CD38− | Fluidigm C1 single-cell AutoPrep system | The authors observed a decrease in cycling-HSC and lymphoid-primed multipotent progenitors with age. |
| Florian et al. 2018 [ | Young mice: 2.5–3 months Aged mice: 20–26 months LSK CD34−Flk2− | scATAC-seq | Young HSCs divided mainly asymmetrically, while aged HSCs divided primarily symmetrically. |
| Cheung et al. 2018 [ | Young humans: < 25 years Aged humans: > 65 years Primary human immune cells | Epigenetic landscape profiling using cytometry by time-of-flight (EpiTOF) | The authors found consistent increases in chromatin marks in a broad array of cell subtypes from hematopoietic progenitors to terminally differentiated immune cells. |
Significant alterations of cell surface markers during HSC aging
| Symbol | Alterations with age | Functions |
|---|---|---|
| CD9 | Upregulated | Adhesion, migration, and platelet activation |
| CD28 | Upregulated | Costimulation |
| CD38 | Upregulated | Cell activation, proliferation, and adhesion |
| CD41 | Upregulated | Platelet activation and aggregation |
| CD47 | Upregulated | Adhesion, activation, apoptosis |
| CD62 | Upregulated | Leukocyte rolling and homing |
| CD69 | Upregulated | Costimulation |
| CD74 | Upregulated | B cell activation |
| CD81 | Upregulated | Activation, costimulation, and differentiation |
| CD151 | Upregulated | Adhesion, signaling |
| CD27 | Downregulated | Costimulation |
| CD34 | Downregulated | Adhesion |
| CD37 | Downregulated | Adhesion, signaling |
| CD44 | Downregulated | Leukocyte rolling, homing, and aggregation |
| CD48 | Downregulated | Adhesion, costimulation |
| CD52 | Downregulated | Costimulation |
| CD63 | Downregulated | Cell motility regulation |
| CD79b | Downregulated | Subunit of BCR, signaling |
| CD86 | Downregulated | Costimulation of T cells activation and proliferation |
| CD97 | Downregulated | Neutrophil migration, adhesion |
| CD97b | Downregulated | Neutrophil migration, adhesion |
| CD151 | Downregulated | Adhesion, signaling |
| CD160 | Downregulated | Costimulation |
Aged HSC rejuvenation strategies
| Rejuvenation approach | Mechanism | Functions | Author and year |
|---|---|---|---|
| Prolonged fasting | Reduces circulating IGF-1 levels | Promote stress resistance, self-renewal, and lineage-balanced regeneration | Cheng et al. 2014 [ |
| Epigenetic modification | Restore the lymphopoietic potential of aged HSCs | Satoh et al. 2013 [ | |
| ROS levels | Restore the long-term competitive repopulation ability | Brown et al. 2013 [ | |
| Mitochondrial functions | Rescue myeloid-biased differentiation | Mohrin et al. 2015 [ | |
| Rapamycin | Inhibition of mTOR | Enhance the regenerative capacity of HSCs from aged mice | Chen et al. 2009 [ |
| CASIN | Inhibition of Cdc42 | Increase the percentage of polarized cells, restore the spatial distribution of H4K16ac, increase lymphoid output, and reduce myeloid lineage output | Florian et al. 2012 [ |
| TN13 | Inhibition of p38 MAPK | Decrease ROS level and increase homing ability | Jung et al. 2016 [ |
| SB203580 | Inhibition of p38 MAPK | Restore the repopulating capacity and maintain quiescence of HSCs | Ito et al. 2006 [ |
| ABT263 | Inhibition of BCL-2 and BCL-xL | Selectively kill senescent cells | Chang et al. 2016 [ |
| Engraft into a young niche | Changing the BM niche | Restore the age-related transcriptional profiles of HSCs | Kuribayashi et al. 2019 [ |
| Sympathomimetic supplementation | Influencing BM innervation | Improve multilineage cell production and HSC engraftment | Maryanovich et al. 2018 [ |