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Lifelong haematopoiesis is established by hundreds of precursors throughout mammalian ontogeny.

Miguel GanuzaTrent HallDavid FinkelsteinAshley ChabotGuolian KangShannon McKinney-Freeman
Published in: Nature cell biology (2017)
Current dogma asserts that mammalian lifelong blood production is established by a small number of blood progenitors. However, this model is based on assays that require the disruption, transplantation and/or culture of embryonic tissues. Here, we used the sample-to-sample variance of a multicoloured lineage trace reporter to assess the frequency of emerging lifelong blood progenitors while avoiding the disruption, culture or transplantation of embryos. We find that approximately 719 Flk1+ mesodermal precursors, 633 VE-cadherin+ endothelial precursors and 545 Vav1+ nascent blood stem and progenitor cells emerge to establish the haematopoietic system at embryonic days (E)7-E8.5, E8.5-E11.5 and E11.5-E14.5, respectively. We also determined that the spatio-temporal recruitment of endothelial blood precursors begins at E8.5 and ends by E10.5, and that many c-Kit+ clusters of newly specified blood progenitors in the aorta are polyclonal in origin. Our work illuminates the dynamics of the developing mammalian blood system during homeostasis.
Keyphrases
  • endothelial cells
  • gene expression
  • stem cells
  • aortic valve
  • risk assessment
  • cell therapy
  • pulmonary hypertension
  • cell migration