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1.
J Immunol ; 201(11): 3307-3319, 2018 12 01.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30366956

RÉSUMÉ

Within the hematopoietic system, the Notch pathway is critical for promoting thymic T cell development and suppressing the B and myeloid lineage fates; however, its impact on NK lymphopoiesis is less understood. To study the role of Notch during NK cell development in vivo, we investigated different NK cell compartments and function in Rbp-Jkfl/flVav-Cretg/+ mice, in which Rbp-Jk, the major transcriptional effector of canonical Notch signaling, was specifically deleted in all hematopoietic cells. Peripheral conventional cytotoxic NK cells in Rbp-Jk-deleted mice were significantly reduced and had an activated phenotype. Furthermore, the pool of early NK cell progenitors in the bone marrow was decreased, whereas immature NK cells were increased, leading to a block in NK cell maturation. These changes were cell intrinsic as the hematopoietic chimeras generated after transplantation of Rbp-Jk-deficient bone marrow cells had the same NK cell phenotype as the Rbp-Jk-deleted donor mice, whereas the wild-type competitors did not. The expression of several crucial NK cell regulatory pathways was significantly altered after Rbp-Jk deletion. Together, these results demonstrate the involvement of canonical Notch signaling in regulation of multiple stages of NK cell development.


Sujet(s)
Facteur de transcription CBF-1/génétique , Cellules tueuses naturelles/physiologie , Progéniteurs lymphoïdes/physiologie , Lymphopoïèse , Récepteurs Notch/métabolisme , Animaux , Différenciation cellulaire , Cellules cultivées , Chimère , Cytotoxicité immunologique , Activation des lymphocytes , Souris , Souris de lignée C57BL , Souris knockout , Transduction du signal
2.
Dev Cell ; 44(3): 362-377.e7, 2018 02 05.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29290585

RÉSUMÉ

ETV6-RUNX1 is associated with childhood acute B-lymphoblastic leukemia (cALL) functioning as a first-hit mutation that initiates a clinically silent pre-leukemia in utero. Because lineage commitment hierarchies differ between embryo and adult, and the impact of oncogenes is cell-context dependent, we hypothesized that the childhood affiliation of ETV6-RUNX1 cALL reflects its origins in a progenitor unique to embryonic life. We characterize the first emerging B cells in first-trimester human embryos, identifying a developmentally restricted CD19-IL-7R+ progenitor compartment, which transitions from a myeloid to lymphoid program during ontogeny. This developmental series is recapitulated in differentiating human pluripotent stem cells (hPSCs), thereby providing a model for the initiation of cALL. Genome-engineered hPSCs expressing ETV6-RUNX1 from the endogenous ETV6 locus show expansion of the CD19-IL-7R+ compartment, show a partial block in B lineage commitment, and produce proB cells with aberrant myeloid gene expression signatures and potential: features (collectively) consistent with a pre-leukemic state.


Sujet(s)
Lymphocytes B/anatomopathologie , Sous-unité alpha 2 du facteur CBF/métabolisme , Développement embryonnaire , Régulation de l'expression des gènes dans la leucémie , Cellules souches pluripotentes induites/anatomopathologie , Cellules myéloïdes/anatomopathologie , Protéines de fusion oncogènes/métabolisme , Leucémie-lymphome lymphoblastique à précurseurs B et T/anatomopathologie , Maladie aigüe , Lymphocytes B/métabolisme , Sous-unité alpha 2 du facteur CBF/génétique , Femelle , Humains , Cellules souches pluripotentes induites/métabolisme , Modèles biologiques , Cellules myéloïdes/métabolisme , Protéines de fusion oncogènes/génétique , Leucémie-lymphome lymphoblastique à précurseurs B et T/métabolisme , Grossesse , Premier trimestre de grossesse , Récepteurs à l'interleukine-7 , Transcriptome
3.
Br J Haematol ; 183(4): 588-600, 2018 11.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30596405

RÉSUMÉ

Given that FLT3 expression is highly restricted on lymphoid progenitors, it is possible that the established role of FLT3 in the regulation of B and T lymphopoiesis reflects its high expression and role in regulation of lymphoid-primed multipotent progenitors (LMPPs) or common lymphoid progenitors (CLPs). We generated a Flt3 conditional knock-out (Flt3fl/fl) mouse model to address the direct role of FLT3 in regulation of lymphoid-restricted progenitors, subsequent to turning on Rag1 expression, as well as potentially ontogeny-specific roles in B and T lymphopoiesis. Our studies establish a prominent and direct role of FLT3, independently of the established role of FLT3 in regulation of LMPPs and CLPs, in regulation of fetal as well as adult early B cell progenitors, and the early thymic progenitors (ETPs) in adult mice but not in the fetus. Our findings highlight the potential benefit of targeting poor prognosis acute B-cell progenitor leukaemia and ETP leukaemia with recurrent FLT3 mutations using clinical FLT3 inhibitors.


Sujet(s)
Cellules de la moelle osseuse/métabolisme , Différenciation cellulaire , Progéniteurs lymphoïdes/métabolisme , Lymphopoïèse , Leucémie-lymphome lymphoblastique à précurseurs B/métabolisme , Tyrosine kinase-3 de type fms/métabolisme , Animaux , Cellules de la moelle osseuse/anatomopathologie , Protéines à homéodomaine/génétique , Protéines à homéodomaine/métabolisme , Progéniteurs lymphoïdes/anatomopathologie , Souris , Souris knockout , Leucémie-lymphome lymphoblastique à précurseurs B/génétique , Leucémie-lymphome lymphoblastique à précurseurs B/anatomopathologie , Thymus (glande)/métabolisme , Thymus (glande)/anatomopathologie , Tyrosine kinase-3 de type fms/génétique
4.
Immunity ; 45(2): 346-57, 2016 08 16.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27533015

RÉSUMÉ

Hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) undergo a functional switch in neonatal mice hallmarked by a decrease in self-renewing divisions and entry into quiescence. Here, we investigated whether the developmental attenuation of B-1a cell output is a consequence of a shift in stem cell state during ontogeny. Using cellular barcoding for in vivo single-cell fate analyses, we found that fetal liver definitive HSCs gave rise to both B-1a and B-2 cells. Whereas B-1a potential diminished in all HSCs with time, B-2 output was maintained. B-1a and B-2 plasticity could be reinitiated in a subset of adult HSCs by ectopic expression of the RNA binding protein LIN28B, a key regulator of fetal hematopoiesis, and this coincided with the clonal reversal to fetal-like elevated self-renewal and repopulation potential. These results anchor the attenuation of B-1a cell output to fetal HSC behavior and demonstrate that the developmental decline in regenerative potential represents a reversible HSC state.


Sujet(s)
Lymphocytes B/physiologie , Protéines de liaison à l'ADN/métabolisme , Cellules souches hématopoïétiques/physiologie , Foie/physiologie , Sous-populations de lymphocytes/physiologie , Animaux , Animaux nouveau-nés , Différenciation cellulaire/génétique , Plasticité cellulaire , Auto-renouvellement cellulaire , Clones cellulaires , Protéines de liaison à l'ADN/génétique , Femelle , Hématopoïèse/génétique , Immunophénotypage , Souris , Souris de lignée C57BL , Souris transgéniques , Protéines de liaison à l'ARN , Analyse sur cellule unique
5.
Blood ; 128(2): 217-26, 2016 07 14.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27207794

RÉSUMÉ

Although it is well established that unique B-cell lineages develop through distinct regulatory mechanisms during embryonic development, much less is understood about the differences between embryonic and adult B-cell progenitor cells, likely to underpin the genetics and biology of infant and childhood PreB acute lymphoblastic leukemia (PreB-ALL), initiated by distinct leukemia-initiating translocations during embryonic development. Herein, we establish that a distinct subset of the earliest CD19(+) B-cell progenitors emerging in the E13.5 mouse fetal liver express the colony-stimulating factor-1 receptor (CSF1R), previously thought to be expressed, and play a lineage-restricted role in development of myeloid lineages, and macrophages in particular. These early embryonic CSF1R(+)CD19(+) ProB cells also express multiple other myeloid genes and, in line with this, possess residual myeloid as well as B-cell, but not T-cell lineage potential. Notably, these CSF1R(+) myeloid-primed ProB cells are uniquely present in a narrow window of embryonic fetal liver hematopoiesis and do not persist in adult bone marrow. Moreover, analysis of CSF1R-deficient mice establishes a distinct role of CSF1R in fetal B-lymphopoiesis. CSF1R(+) myeloid-primed embryonic ProB cells are relevant for infant and childhood PreB-ALLs, which frequently have a bi-phenotypic B-myeloid phenotype, and in which CSF1R-rearrangements have recently been reported.


Sujet(s)
Lignage cellulaire/physiologie , Foetus/métabolisme , Lymphopoïèse/physiologie , Précurseurs lymphoïdes B/métabolisme , Récepteur de facteur de croissance granulocyte-macrophage/métabolisme , Animaux , Foetus/cytologie , Souris , Souris knockout , Précurseurs lymphoïdes B/cytologie , Récepteur de facteur de croissance granulocyte-macrophage/génétique
6.
Nat Immunol ; 17(6): 666-676, 2016 06.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27043410

RÉSUMÉ

According to current models of hematopoiesis, lymphoid-primed multi-potent progenitors (LMPPs) (Lin(-)Sca-1(+)c-Kit(+)CD34(+)Flt3(hi)) and common myeloid progenitors (CMPs) (Lin(-)Sca-1(+)c-Kit(+)CD34(+)CD41(hi)) establish an early branch point for separate lineage-commitment pathways from hematopoietic stem cells, with the notable exception that both pathways are proposed to generate all myeloid innate immune cell types through the same myeloid-restricted pre-granulocyte-macrophage progenitor (pre-GM) (Lin(-)Sca-1(-)c-Kit(+)CD41(-)FcγRII/III(-)CD150(-)CD105(-)). By single-cell transcriptome profiling of pre-GMs, we identified distinct myeloid differentiation pathways: a pathway expressing the gene encoding the transcription factor GATA-1 generated mast cells, eosinophils, megakaryocytes and erythroid cells, and a pathway lacking expression of that gene generated monocytes, neutrophils and lymphocytes. These results identify an early hematopoietic-lineage bifurcation that separates the myeloid lineages before their segregation from other hematopoietic-lineage potential.


Sujet(s)
Différenciation cellulaire , Lignage cellulaire , Lymphocytes/physiologie , Cellules myéloïdes/physiologie , Progéniteurs myéloïdes/physiologie , Animaux , Antigènes CD/métabolisme , Cellules cultivées , Biologie informatique , Facteur de transcription GATA-1/génétique , Facteur de transcription GATA-1/métabolisme , Hématopoïèse , Immunité innée , Souris , Souris de lignée C57BL , Souris knockout , Souris transgéniques , Analyse de séquence d'ARN , Analyse sur cellule unique , Analyse sur puce à tissus , Tyrosine kinase-3 de type fms/génétique , Tyrosine kinase-3 de type fms/métabolisme
7.
Immunity ; 43(2): 394-407, 2015 Aug 18.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26287684

RÉSUMÉ

Natural killer (NK) cells are cytotoxic lymphocytes and play a vital role in controlling viral infections and cancer. In contrast to B and T lymphopoiesis where cellular and regulatory pathways have been extensively characterized, the cellular stages of early human NK cell commitment remain poorly understood. Here we demonstrate that a Lin(-)CD34(+)CD38(+)CD123(-)CD45RA(+)CD7(+)CD10(+)CD127(-) population represents a NK lineage-restricted progenitor (NKP) in fetal development, umbilical cord blood, and adult tissues. The newly identified NKP has robust NK cell potential both in vitro and in vivo, generates functionally cytotoxic NK cells, and lacks the ability to produce T cells, B cells, myeloid cells, and innate lymphoid-like cells (ILCs). Our findings identify an early step to human NK cell commitment and provide new insights into the human hematopoietic hierarchy.


Sujet(s)
Sang foetal/cytologie , Foetus/cytologie , Hématopoïèse , Cellules tueuses naturelles/physiologie , Progéniteurs lymphoïdes/physiologie , Adulte , Antigènes CD/métabolisme , Différenciation cellulaire , Lignage cellulaire , Cytotoxicité immunologique , Développement foetal , Hématopoïèse/immunologie , Humains , Immunité innée , Immunophénotypage
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