The bone marrow microenvironment at single-cell resolution

The bone marrow microenvironment has a key role in regulating haematopoiesis, but its molecular complexity and response to stress are incompletely understood. Here we map the transcriptional landscape of mouse bone marrow vascular, perivascular and osteoblast cell populations at single-cell resoluti...

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Published inNature (London) Vol. 569; no. 7755; pp. 222 - 228
Main Authors Tikhonova, Anastasia N., Dolgalev, Igor, Hu, Hai, Sivaraj, Kishor K., Hoxha, Edlira, Cuesta-Domínguez, Álvaro, Pinho, Sandra, Akhmetzyanova, Ilseyar, Gao, Jie, Witkowski, Matthew, Guillamot, Maria, Gutkin, Michael C., Zhang, Yutong, Marier, Christian, Diefenbach, Catherine, Kousteni, Stavroula, Heguy, Adriana, Zhong, Hua, Fooksman, David R., Butler, Jason M., Economides, Aris, Frenette, Paul S., Adams, Ralf H., Satija, Rahul, Tsirigos, Aristotelis, Aifantis, Iannis
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published London Nature Publishing Group UK 01.05.2019
Nature Publishing Group
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Summary:The bone marrow microenvironment has a key role in regulating haematopoiesis, but its molecular complexity and response to stress are incompletely understood. Here we map the transcriptional landscape of mouse bone marrow vascular, perivascular and osteoblast cell populations at single-cell resolution, both at homeostasis and under conditions of stress-induced haematopoiesis. This analysis revealed previously unappreciated levels of cellular heterogeneity within the bone marrow niche and resolved cellular sources of pro-haematopoietic growth factors, chemokines and membrane-bound ligands. Our studies demonstrate a considerable transcriptional remodelling of niche elements under stress conditions, including an adipocytic skewing of perivascular cells. Among the stress-induced changes, we observed that vascular Notch delta-like ligands (encoded by Dll1 and Dll4 ) were downregulated. In the absence of vascular Dll4 , haematopoietic stem cells prematurely induced a myeloid transcriptional program. These findings refine our understanding of the cellular architecture of the bone marrow niche, reveal a dynamic and heterogeneous molecular landscape that is highly sensitive to stress and illustrate the utility of single-cell transcriptomic data in evaluating the regulation of haematopoiesis by discrete niche populations. The transcriptional landscape of cell populations of the mouse bone marrow microenvironment, mapped at single-cell resolution, reveals cellular heterogeneity in this niche as well as substantial transcriptional remodelling under stress conditions.
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A.N.T., I.D. and I.A. designed the study and prepared the manuscript. A.N.T. performed the majority of the experiments. I.D. performed all the computational analysis with guidance in the execution from R.S and A.T. J.G. generated mouse strains. H.H. and E.H. provided technical assistance with animal models. M.W. and S.P. performed differentiation assays with guidance in the execution from P.S.F. All microscopy was performed and interpreted by K.K.S., A.C., M.C.G., A.N.T. and I.A. with guidance from R.A., D.R.F., J.M.B, and S.K. Y.Z., C.M., and A.H. generated the scRNA-seq data. M.R.G. and C.D. assisted with transplantation assays. A.E., R.A. provided mouse strains and assisted with data analysis. H.Z. assisted with statistical analysis.
Contributions
These authors contributed equally
ISSN:0028-0836
1476-4687
DOI:10.1038/s41586-019-1104-8