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The characterization of distinct populations of murine skeletal cells that have different roles in B lymphopoiesis

journal contribution
posted on 2024-08-05, 04:45 authored by Alanna C Green, Gavin Tjin, Samuel C Lee, Alistair M Chalk, Lenny Straszkowski, Diannita Kwang, Emma K Baker, Julie M Quach, Takaharu Kimura, Joy Y Wu, Louise E Purton
AbstractHematopoiesis is extrinsically controlled by cells of the bone marrow microenvironment, including skeletal lineage cells. The identification and subsequent studies of distinct subpopulations of maturing skeletal cells is currently limited because of a lack of methods to isolate these cells. We found that murine Lin–CD31–Sca-1–CD51+ cells can be divided into 4 subpopulations by using flow cytometry based on their expression of the platelet-derived growth factor receptors ⍺ and β (PDGFR⍺ and PDGFRβ). The use of different skeletal lineage reporters confirmed the skeletal origin of the 4 populations. Multiplex immunohistochemistry studies revealed that all 4 populations were localized near the growth plate and trabecular bone and were rarely found near cortical bone regions or in central bone marrow. Functional studies revealed differences in their abundance, colony-forming unit–fibroblast capacity, and potential to differentiate into mineralized osteoblasts or adipocytes in vitro. Furthermore, the 4 populations had distinct gene expression profiles and differential cell surface expression of leptin receptor (LEPR) and vascular cell adhesion molecule 1 (VCAM-1). Interestingly, we discovered that 1 of these 4 different skeletal populations showed the highest expression of genes involved in the extrinsic regulation of B lymphopoiesis. This cell population varied in abundance between distinct hematopoietically active skeletal sites, and significant differences in the proportions of B-lymphocyte precursors were also observed in these distinct skeletal sites. This cell population also supported pre-B lymphopoiesis in culture. Our method of isolating 4 distinct maturing skeletal populations will help elucidate the roles of distinct skeletal niche cells in regulating hematopoiesis and bone.

History

Journal

Blood

Volume

138

Pagination

304-317

Location

New York, N.Y.

Open access

  • No

ISSN

0006-4971

eISSN

1528-0020

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Issue

4

Publisher

American Society of Hematology