A kinetics-based model of haematopoiesis reveals extrinsic regulation of skewed lineage output from stem cells

Autor/innen

  • Esther Rodríguez-Correa
  • Florian Grünschläger
  • Tamar Nizharadze
  • Natasha Anstee
  • Jude Al-Sabah
  • Vojtech Kumpost
  • Anastasia Sedlmeier
  • Congxin Li
  • Melanie Ball
  • Foteini Fotopoulou
  • Jeyan Jayarajan
  • Ian Ghezzi
  • Julia Knoch
  • Megan Druce
  • Kleo Aurich
  • Marleen Büchler-Schäff
  • Susanne Lux
  • Pablo Hernández-Malmierca
  • Julius Gräsel
  • Dominik Vonficht
  • Marta López-Osias
  • Elvira González-Saiz
  • Daniel Fernández-Pérez
  • Anna Mathioudaki
  • Judith Zaugg
  • Alejo Rodríguez-Fraticelli
  • Ralf Mikut
  • Andreas Trumpp
  • Thomas Höfer
  • Daniel Hübschmann
  • Simon Haas
  • Michael D. Milsom

Journal

  • Nature Cell Biology

Quellenangabe

  • Nat Cell Biol

Zusammenfassung

  • Haematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) display extensive molecular and functional heterogeneity. However, a cohesive model that explains the relationship and biological relevance of these diverse HSC states remains elusive. Here, by performing single-cell transplantations of over 1,000 highly purified murine long-term HSCs combined with in-depth phenotyping of their clonal progeny, we define kinetics-based reconstitution parameters which aligned HSCs into a single hierarchical trajectory reflective of functional potency. This approach revealed that previously identified lineage biases are actually transitory states along this linear trajectory, not a discrete stable condition. Single-cell secondary transplantations validated hierarchical ordering based on reconstitution kinetics, whereas mathematical modelling combined with experimental modulation of lineage-biased blood production revealed that apparent lineage-biased outputs actually arise from cell-extrinsic feedback regulation and clonal competition between slow- and fast-engrafting clones to fill mature lineages to their compartment size limit. This study reconciles multiple layers of HSC heterogeneity into a unifying framework.


DOI

doi:10.1038/s41556-026-01958-0