Cell Reports (Mar 2021)

Ontogenic shifts in cellular fate are linked to proteotype changes in lineage-biased hematopoietic progenitor cells

  • Maria Jassinskaja,
  • Kristýna Pimková,
  • Nejc Arh,
  • Emil Johansson,
  • Mina Davoudi,
  • Carlos-Filipe Pereira,
  • Ewa Sitnicka,
  • Jenny Hansson

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 34, no. 12
p. 108894

Abstract

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Summary: The process of hematopoiesis is subject to substantial ontogenic remodeling that is accompanied by alterations in cellular fate during both development and disease. We combine state-of-the-art mass spectrometry with extensive functional assays to gain insight into ontogeny-specific proteomic mechanisms regulating hematopoiesis. Through deep coverage of the cellular proteome of fetal and adult lympho-myeloid multipotent progenitors (LMPPs), common lymphoid progenitors (CLPs), and granulocyte-monocyte progenitors (GMPs), we establish that features traditionally attributed to adult hematopoiesis are conserved across lymphoid and myeloid lineages, whereas generic fetal features are suppressed in GMPs. We reveal molecular and functional evidence for a diminished granulocyte differentiation capacity in fetal LMPPs and GMPs relative to their adult counterparts. Our data indicate an ontogeny-specific requirement of myosin activity for myelopoiesis in LMPPs. Finally, we uncover an ontogenic shift in the monocytic differentiation capacity of GMPs, partially driven by a differential expression of Irf8 during fetal and adult life.

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