Lineage-tracing hematopoietic stem cell origins in vivo to efficiently make human HLF+ HOXA+ hematopoietic progenitors from pluripotent stem cells.

Journal: Developmental Cell
Published:
Abstract

The developmental origin of blood-forming hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) is a longstanding question. Here, our non-invasive genetic lineage tracing in mouse embryos pinpoints that artery endothelial cells generate HSCs. Arteries are transiently competent to generate HSCs for 2.5 days (∼E8.5-E11) but subsequently cease, delimiting a narrow time frame for HSC formation in vivo. Guided by the arterial origins of blood, we efficiently and rapidly differentiate human pluripotent stem cells (hPSCs) into posterior primitive streak, lateral mesoderm, artery endothelium, hemogenic endothelium, and >90% pure hematopoietic progenitors within 10 days. hPSC-derived hematopoietic progenitors generate T, B, NK, erythroid, and myeloid cells in vitro and, critically, express hallmark HSC transcription factors HLF and HOXA5-HOXA10, which were previously challenging to upregulate. We differentiated hPSCs into highly enriched HLF+ HOXA+ hematopoietic progenitors with near-stoichiometric efficiency by blocking formation of unwanted lineages at each differentiation step. hPSC-derived HLF+ HOXA+ hematopoietic progenitors could avail both basic research and cellular therapies.

Authors
Jonas Fowler, Sherry Zheng, Alana Nguyen, Angela Chen, Xiaochen Xiong, Timothy Chai, Julie Chen, Daiki Karigane, Allison Banuelos, Kouta Niizuma, Kensuke Kayamori, Toshinobu Nishimura, M Cromer, David Gonzalez Perez, Charlotte Mason, Daniel Liu, Leyla Yilmaz, Lucile Miquerol, Matthew Porteus, Vincent Luca, Ravindra Majeti, Hiromitsu Nakauchi, Kristy Red Horse, Irving Weissman, Lay Ang, Kyle Loh