Key Points
After induced HSPC depletion, HSC numbers remain at low levels whereas progenitors show robust recovery.
Despite low HSC numbers, hematopoiesis proceeds normally without increased proliferation of the few residual HSCs.
Abstract
Long-term repopulating (LT) hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) are the most undifferentiated cells at the top of the hematopoietic hierarchy. The regulation of HSC pool size and its contribution to hematopoiesis are incompletely understood. We depleted hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells (HSPCs) in adult mice in situ and found that LT-HSCs recovered from initially very low levels (<1%) to below 10% of normal numbers but not more, whereas progenitor cells substantially recovered shortly after depletion. In spite of the persistent and massive reduction of LT-HSCs, steady-state hematopoiesis was unaffected and residual HSCs remained quiescent. Hematopoietic stress, although reported to recruit quiescent HSCs into cycle, was well tolerated by HSPC-depleted mice and did not induce expansion of the small LT-HSC compartment. Only upon 5-fluorouracil treatment was HSPC-depleted bone marrow compromised in reconstituting hematopoiesis, demonstrating that HSCs and early progenitors are crucial to compensate myeloablation. Hence, a contracted HSC compartment cannot recover in situ to its original size, and normal steady-state blood cell generation is sustained with <10% of normal LT-HSC numbers without increased contribution of the few residual cells.
Introduction
The hematopoietic system continuously produces enormous numbers of mature blood cells. Bone marrow (BM)-resident hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) are the most undifferentiated cells in the hematopoietic system and give rise to a series of rapidly proliferating precursor populations.1,2 The hierarchy of hematopoietic stem and progenitor cell (HSPC) populations was largely established by transplantation of purified BM cell subsets into myeloablated recipients.3 The cells at the top of this hierarchy, defined by their unique capability to long-term repopulate irradiated recipient mice, are designated long-term repopulating (LT)-HSCs2 and are endowed with remarkable proliferative potential.
Alongside a quiescent fraction of about 20% to 30% of the HSC population that was found to cycle only every 150 to 200 days, a larger population of “homeostatic” HSCs was supposed to continuously maintain hematopoiesis by cell divisions every 20 to 30 days.4,5 HSCs were shown to be awakened from quiescence by cytokines, including interferon α,6 interferon γ,7 and granulocyte colony-stimulating factor8 (G-CSF), to meet increased demand in situations of emergency including infection and blood loss. These findings established a concept of continuously active participation of HSCs in steady-state blood cell production and a central role of these cells in emergency hematopoiesis. Two studies,9,10 however, recently reported in vivo cell-fate tracking in the hematopoietic system and showed that LT-HSC contribution to hematopoiesis is much less than previously estimated and predicted that steady-state hematopoiesis should continue to function normally in mice in the absence of LT-HSCs.
Here, we directly tested this prediction by induced depletion of LT-HSCs and primitive progenitors in vivo. Unexpectedly, LT-HSCs recovered to only a few percent of normal numbers within the first weeks after efficient depletion and then remained at this low level, whereas progenitor populations quickly reexpanded. This persistent reduction of LT-HSC numbers did not compromise steady-state blood cell generation for at least 1 year. The few residual LT-HSCs remained quiescent and their proliferation rate was unchanged. Even hematopoietic stressors known to cause HSC activation were tolerated by HSPC-depleted animals, demonstrating that steady-state and even stress hematopoiesis do not depend on contribution of the LT-HSC compartment.
Methods
Animals
HSC-CreERT/R26DTA mice were generated by crossing R26DTA (Gt(ROSA)26Sortm1(DTA)Lky)11 and HSC-CreERT (Tg(Tal1-cre/ERT)42-056Jrg) mice.12 The following mouse strains were additionally used: R26EYFP (Gt(ROSA)26Sortm1(EYFP)Cos),13 R26RFP (Gt(ROSA)26Sortm1Hjf),14 B6.CD45.1 (B6.SJL-Ptprca Pepcb/BoyJ),15 and R26rtTA/Col1a1tetO-H2B-RFP (Gt(ROSA)26Sortm1(rtTA*M2)Jae/Col1a1tm1(tetO-mCherry)Eggn).16 HSC-CreERT R26EYFP Cre-excision reporter mice were generated by mating HSC-CreERT mice to R26EYFP animals. Mice with ubiquitous expression of red fluorescent protein (RFP) (B6.ubiRFP) or enhanced yellow fluorescent protein (EYFP) (B6.ubiEYFP) were derived from R26RFP or R26EYFP animals by breeding to pgk-Cre animals (Tg(Pgk1-cre)1Lni).17 All animals were maintained on C57BL/6 genetic background and kept under specific pathogen-free conditions. All animal experiments were done according to institutional guidelines and were approved by Landesdirektion Dresden (ref. no. 24-9168.11-1/2012-39).
Tamoxifen induction
One to 2 weeks before start of tamoxifen (TAM) administration, mice were kept on a low phytoestrogen standard diet (LASvendi, Solingen, Germany). TAM tablets (30 mg; Ratiopharm, Ulm, Germany) were dissolved overnight in lipid emulsion (SMOFlipid; Fresenius Kabi, Bad Homburg, Germany). TAM solution (20 mg/mL) was applied by oral gavage using a syringe and feeding needle at doses of 0.1 to 0.3 mg/g body weight (BW) to animals at the age of 8 to 12 weeks. In some experiments, mice were additionally fed TAM-containing (400 mg/kg) chow (LASvendi).
Treatments of mice
5-Fluorouracil (5-FU) (150 µg/g BW; Applichem, Darmstadt, Germany) was administered via intravenous (IV) or intraperitoneal (IP) injection. Two doses of polyinosinic-polycytidylic acid (pI:C) (5 µg/g BW, first and third day; Invivogen, Toulouse, France) were injected IP. Two doses of phenylhydrazine (PHZ) (40 µg/g BW, first and second day; Sigma-Aldrich, Schnelldorf, Germany) were injected IP. Five doses of filgrastim (recombinant human G-CSF, 0.3 µg/g BW daily; Amgen, Munich, Germany) were subcutaneously injected. For platelet depletion, mice were IP injected once with 1.5 µL/g BW of rabbit anti-mouse thrombocyte serum (Accurate Chemical, Westbury, NY). Histone H2B-RFP expression was induced by providing doxycyclin (Dox) (1 mg/mL; Applichem) containing drinking water supplemented with 1% (wt/vol) sucrose for 8 weeks.
BM transplantation
Recipient mice received a single dose of 9 Gy total body irradiation (Yxlon Maxi Shot Source, Hamburg, Germany). Donor cells were administered via IV injection into the retroorbital sinus. Recipient mice received neomycin via drinking water (1.17 g/L) for 3 weeks after γ-irradiation.
In order to determine the frequency of LT repopulating cells, limiting dilutions of whole BM cells (WBMCs) from TAM-induced HSC-CreERT/R26DTA/DTA mice were transplanted either directly or 13 weeks after induction alongside with 2 × 105 B6.CD45.1 competitor WBMCs into irradiated B6.CD45.1/CD45.2 recipients. Sixteen to 22 weeks after transplantation, recipient peripheral blood (PB) T lymphocytes (CD3+), B lymphocytes (B220+), and neutrophils (CD11b+, Gr-1hi) were analyzed for their donor origin using a MACSquant flow cytometer (Miltenyi Biotec, Bergisch-Gladbach, Germany). Mice showing ≥0.01% HSC-CreERT/R26DTA/DTA multilineage chimerism (each T-cell, B-cell, and neutrophil population ≥0.01% donor-derived cells) were scored as LT repopulated. Frequency of LT repopulating cells was calculated using ELDA software.18
Cell preparation
BM cells were isolated by crushing or flushing long bones using phosphate-buffered saline (PBS)/2% fetal calf serum (FCS; Biochrom, Berlin, Germany)/2 mM EDTA and filtered through a 100-µm mesh. After erythrocyte lysis in NH4Cl buffer, cells were filtered through a 40-µm mesh.
PB was drawn into glass capillaries by retrobulbar puncture. For chimerism analysis, blood was flushed out of the capillary using PBS/heparin (250 units/mL; Biochrom). Erythrocyte lysis in NH4Cl buffer was performed twice for 5 minutes. For hemograms, blood was drawn by retrobulbar puncture directly into EDTA-coated tubes (Sarstedt, Nuembrecht, Germany) and analyzed on a Sysmex XT-2000i Vet analyzer (Sysmex, Norderstedt, Germany).
Spleen cell suspensions were prepared by gently rubbing the entire spleen through a 40-µm cell strainer. After erythrocyte lysis, cells were filtered through a 40-µm mesh.
Endosteal cells were isolated as described19 with minor modifications. Briefly, long bones were collected and crushed in PBS/2% FCS using mortar and pestle. After depletion of BM cells by washing with PBS/2% FCS, bone fragments were incubated with type I collagenase (3 mg/mL; Worthington, Cellsystems, Troisdorf, Germany) in Dulbecco modified Eagle medium with 10% FCS at 37°C, shaking at 1400 rpm in an Eppendorf thermomixer (Hamburg, Germany) for 60 minutes. After digestion, the supernatant was filtered through a 100-µm mesh, followed by erythrocyte lysis. Cell populations were resolved by flow cytometry (supplemental Figure 1C, available on the Blood Web site).
Flow cytometry
Cells were incubated with antibodies in PBS/2% FCS for 30 minutes, washed twice with PBS/2% FCS, and analyzed on a FACSCalibur, LSR II, ARIA II SORP, or ARIA III (BD Biosciences, Heidelberg, Germany). Data were analyzed using FlowJo V9 software (Tree Star, Ashland, OR) and gates were set according to fluorescence-minus-one controls.
For a detailed overview of antibody clones and gating strategies, refer to supplemental Figures 1 and 4C and supplemental Table 2. Absolute numbers of BM, spleen, and endosteal cells were determined on a MACSquant flow cytometer (Miltenyi Biotec) using propidium iodide staining for dead cell exclusion.
Cell sorting was performed on FACS ARIA III (BD Biosciences). Aliquots of sorted lineage−Sca1+CD117+ (LSK) CD48−CD150+CD34−CD135− LT-HSCs were reanalyzed (purity >95%).
For analysis of cell cycle, WBMCs were immunomagnetically enriched using anti-CD117 microbeads (Miltenyi Biotec). After extracellular antibody staining, cells were fixed and permeabilized using Cytofix/Cytoperm (BD Biosciences), followed by intracellular staining with anti-Ki-67 and FxCycle Violet dye (Thermo Fisher, Waltham, MA). Cells were analyzed on a FACS ARIA III flow cytometer (BD Biosciences). For gating strategy, see supplemental Figure 1D.
Statistics
See supplemental Methods.
Results
Inducible depletion of LT-HSCs and progenitors
In order to deplete HSCs and progenitors in vivo, we followed a genetic strategy allowing for controlled suicidal expression of diphtheria toxin A (DTA) with high efficiency in LT-HSCs (Figure 1A). HSC-CreERT+R26DTA/DTA and Cre−R26DTA/DTA control mice (see “Methods”) were induced by oral administration of TAM (Figure 1B). Seven days after start of induction, BM was harvested for quantification of HSPCs. Numbers of immunophenotypic LT-HSCs4,20 recovered in total from both femora and both tibiae were reduced to 4% of control numbers (Figure 1C-D). Short-term (ST)-HSCs, multipotent progenitors21 (MPPs), and common myeloid progenitors22 (CMPs) were reduced by about 50% whereas the lineage-negative (lin−) population and WBMCs were not significantly altered (see supplemental Figure 1 for gating strategies). In general, the reduction of progenitor cells decreased with more mature immunophenotype. Additional experiments using either the R26DTA allele or the R26EYFP Cre excision reporter demonstrated that recombination efficiency of HSC and progenitor populations was dependent on TAM dosage and duration of administration as well as zygosity of the R26 alleles (Figure 1E; supplemental Figure 2A-C), and depletion of immunophenotypic LT-HSCs can approach 100% (Figure 2A; supplemental Figure 2A-B). TAM induction had no significant effects on BM populations in Cre− and Cre+R26wt/wt control mice (supplemental Figure 2B). The repopulation activity of CreERT-recombined EYFP+ LT-HSCs purified from TAM-induced HSC-CreERT+R26EYFP/EYFP mice matched unrecombined control LT-HSCs, excluding significant CreERT-related genotoxicity (supplemental Figure 2D). In the absence of TAM, we did not observe HSPC depletion or activation of the R26EYFP reporter (supplemental Figure 2E). Analysis of PB, spleen, or peritoneal cell populations (Figure 1E; supplemental Figure 2A,F) did not reveal any reduction of mature hematopoietic cells after TAM induction, except for a complete depletion of mast cells and partial loss of T cells caused by known activity of the promoter Scl 3′ enhancer in these cell types.12,23 By competitively transplanting WBMCs from TAM-induced HSC-CreERT/R26DTA/DTA and wild-type (wt) animals into irradiated recipients (Figure 1F), we confirmed severe reduction of functional LT-HSC repopulation activity in HSPC-depleted mice.
We next asked whether damage to HSC niches by the stem and progenitor cell depletion procedure might contribute to the loss of HSCs. Osteoblasts,24,25 CXCL12-abundant reticular cells,26 and mesenchymal stromal cells27 (supplemental Figure 1C) showed no sign of Cre-mediated recombination in HSC-CreERT+R26EYFP/EYFP mice and their numbers were not altered in HSPC-depleted mice compared with controls (Figure 3A-B). Fifty percent of endothelial cells28 (ECs) showed activation of the Cre-excision reporter and ECs were reduced by 50% in HSPC-depleted animals. In order to test whether the reduction of ECs contributed to HSPC depletion, we transplanted uninduced HSC-CreERT+R26DTA/DTA mice with wt WBMCs and TAM treatment of the chimeras 10 weeks later reproduced the partial loss of ECs but showed no reduction of LT-HSCs (Figure 3C). Because TAM-induced HSC-CreERT+R26DTA/DTA animals displayed massively reduced HSPC numbers, we hypothesized that these mice might be receptive for BM transplants without additional preconditioning and transferred WBMCs from congenic B6.ubiRFP donors into TAM-induced HSC-CreERT/R26DTA/DTA recipients (Figure 3D). In contrast to Cre− control recipients, PB and BM analysis revealed a robust donor chimerism in HSPC-depleted recipients, confirming unperturbed HSC niches after HSPC depletion.
Collectively, we showed highly efficient depletion of LT-HSCs in TAM-induced HSC-CreERT+R26DTA/DTA mice whereas ST-HSCs and progenitors were only moderately reduced. Important cellular constituents of the HSC niche were not affected and the temporary loss (see Figure 2A) of 50% of BM ECs was irrelevant for HSC maintenance.
After induced depletion, LT-HSCs initially reexpand but then stagnate at low numbers
To assess the duration of LT-HSC reduction, HSPC-depleted mice were sacrificed at different time points after TAM induction for BM analysis (Figure 2A). The LT-HSC population recovered initially and expanded from almost undetectable to 8% of control numbers within 6 weeks after depletion. Unexpectedly, LT-HSC numbers stagnated at this level for at least 28 weeks, whereas ECs had already recovered within 6 weeks. To test whether this persistent reduction of immunophenotypic LT-HSCs was also reflected in a loss of functional LT-HSC activity, we competitively transplanted WBMCs 17 weeks after HSPC depletion (Figure 2B; supplemental Figure 3A) and found repopulating activity severely reduced. In order to obtain an estimate of the functional HSC frequency directly after depletion as well as in the plateau phase, we transplanted limiting doses29 of HSC-CreERT+R26DTA/DTA WBMCs together with wt competitor cells (Figure 2C; supplemental Table 1). The HSC frequency of Cre+ mice was reduced to 1% of Cre− littermate controls (Cre+, 1/6.2 × 106 WBMCs; Cre−, 1/7.0 × 104 WBMCs) directly after TAM induction, whereas the HSC frequency of mice 13 weeks after depletion had increased to 7% of controls (Cre+, 1/6.5 × 105 WBMCs; Cre−, 1/4.3 × 104 WBMCs). In a similar approach, we transplanted limiting doses of WBMCs from animals that were depleted 14 weeks earlier without additional competitor cells and estimated the HSC frequency to be 1/1.2 × 106 WBMCs (supplemental Figure 3B).
In order to rule out that the incomplete recovery of LT-HSCs was due to damage to cells providing niche space for HSCs, we performed control experiments in which we transplanted HSC-CreERT+R26DTA/DTA BM cells from untreated animals into irradiated wt recipients and induced HSPC depletion only later in the chimera (Figure 2D; supplemental Figure 3C). Also, this setup did not result in HSC recovery. The limited LT-HSC recovery in HSPC-depleted mice was not caused by persistent bioactivity of TAM30 as determined by transplantation of uninduced HSC-CreERT+/R26EYFP/wt WBMCs into previously TAM-treated wt recipients (supplemental Figure 3D).
Collectively, upon induced depletion in adult mice, LT-HSCs initially reexpanded for some weeks, but then stagnated at <10% of normal numbers as shown immunophenotypically and functionally.
Persistently low LT-HSC numbers do not impair hematopoiesis
To address effects of the prolonged LT-HSC reduction on hematopoiesis, we assessed numbers of precursor and mature blood cells of the HSPC-depleted animals shown in Figure 2A. After induced HSPC depletion, progenitor populations also showed variable reduction, but in contrast to LT-HSCs rapidly recovered. While erythromyeloid progenitors, lin− and WBMCs reached the range of controls within 6 to 13 weeks after TAM induction (Figure 4A; supplemental Figure 4D), ST-HSCs and MPPs had recovered to 50% of normal numbers by this time. Consistent with substantial recovery of BM precursors, numbers of mature cells in PB (Figure 4B; supplemental Figure 4A) and spleen (supplemental Figure 4B) did not evidence hematopoietic failure for at least 50 weeks after TAM induction. We found no signs of compensatory extramedullary hematopoiesis in HSPC-depleted mice (supplemental Figure 4C).
We next asked whether the few residual HSCs compensated for the loss of the bulk of the population by rapid proliferation and determined cell-cycle activity 1, 4, and 30 weeks after TAM induction (Figure 4C; supplemental Figure 4D). One week after HSPC depletion, all hematopoietic progenitor cells were rapidly cycling, whereas analysis of residual LT-HSCs was precluded by their low abundance. At later time points, the majority of residual LT-HSCs remained quiescent and the distribution of cells in G0, G1, and S/G2/M phase did not significantly differ from Cre− littermate controls. Moreover, cell-cycle activity of residual LT-HSCs did not correlate with the severity of LT-HSC depletion (Figure 4D). In order to quantify cumulative proliferation of residual LT-HSCs after depletion, we generated HSC-CreERT/R26DTA/rtTA/Col1A1tetO-H2B-RFP/wt mice. In these animals, expression of a fluorescent histone H2B-RFP fusion protein can be induced Cre-independently by Dox administration. After withdrawal of Dox, retention of this label identifies quiescent cells.4,5,31 We TAM-induced HSC-CreERT/R26DTA/rtTA/Col1A1tetO-H2B-RFP/wt animals, subsequently pulsed them with Dox (Figure 4E), and analyzed the BM after 6 weeks of chase. Frequencies of LT-HSCs retaining or diluting the label (Figure 4E; supplemental Figure 4E) were not significantly different between HSPC-depleted animals and Cre− littermates. Based on median fluorescence intensity and frequency of RFP+ LT-HSCs, we estimated that residual LT-HSCs from depleted animals underwent on average less than a single (∼0.5-0.8; see supplemental Figure 4F) additional cell division within 6 weeks of chase compared with LT-HSCs from control mice.
In order to address the functionality of residual LT-HSCs, we transplanted LSK CD48−CD150+CD34−CD135− cells isolated from HSC-CreERT/R26DTA/DTA mice that were TAM-induced 17 weeks before along with competitor wt WBMCs (Figure 4F). Donor contribution to PB of chimeric recipients was inhomogeneous among donor LT-HSCs isolated from individual Cre+ mice and BM analysis after 23 weeks revealed a significant reduction of repopulation activity. The repopulation potential did not correlate with the size of the residual LT-HSC population (supplemental Figure 4G).
In summary, we found quick and substantial recovery of hematopoietic progenitor populations and normal numbers of mature blood cells in HSPC-depleted mice. The repopulation activity of the residual HSC pool was inhomogeneous and reduced, albeit present. In contrast to this, we found no evidence for strongly increased proliferation of residual LT-HSCs as a compensatory mechanism.
Hematopoietic stress is well tolerated in spite of low HSC numbers
In order to test whether HSPC-depleted mice can acutely increase their mature blood cell output, we applied different hematopoietic stressors. Hemolytic anemia was induced by PHZ injection (Figure 5A; supplemental Figure 5A). In HSPC-depleted mice, hematocrit and erythrocyte numbers as well as physical constitution showed a similar recovery compared with control mice and both groups featured comparable increases in PB reticulocytes and BM erythroid progenitors.32 Likewise, thrombocyte numbers rapidly recovered with similar kinetics in both groups after induced depletion by injection of antiplatelet serum (Figure 5B). BM analysis 6 days after treatment revealed persistently low HSC numbers in Cre+ animals, whereas progenitors were not significantly altered.
Next, we challenged HSPC-depleted and control mice by administration of G-CSF, which causes cell-cycle entry, as well as mobilization and myeloid differentiation of HSCs and progenitor cells.33 G-CSF was administered for 5 consecutive days (Figure 5C) and accelerated blood cell generation (supplemental Figure 5B) and mobilized LT-HSCs to the periphery in both groups (Figure 5C). BM analysis of HSPC-depleted mice 2 weeks after treatment revealed that G-CSF treatment had not stimulated expansion of HSC numbers as judged by immunophenotype and repopulation activity (Figure 5C; supplemental Figure 5C). We also treated HSPC-depleted mice and controls with the type I interferon inducer pI:C, which causes HSC activation.6 pI:C treatment was well tolerated and did not result in LT-HSC expansion in HSPC-depleted mice (supplemental Figure 5D).
We next challenged HSPC-depleted and control mice with a single dose of 5-FU, which eliminates cycling cells. Six days after 5-FU, mice of both groups showed severe loss of platelets (PLTs), reticulocytes, and white blood cells (WBCs), as expected (Figure 5D; supplemental Figure 5E). At day 13, both groups had recovered as judged by PB and macroscopic parameters. PB cell generation of the HSPC-depleted cohort, however, recovered with significant delay. Despite low HSCs numbers in these mice, progenitor counts were already in the range of controls at this time point. In a second experiment with more efficient depletion and earlier application of 5-FU (supplemental Figure 5F), hematopoiesis failed in HSPC-depleted animals.
In summary, hematopoietic stress was tolerated by HSPC-depleted mice and did not induce reexpansion of LT-HSC numbers. However, 5-FU–induced myeloablation was compensated with delay or was lethal in HSPC-depleted animals.
Discussion
A majority of HSCs were reported to actively contribute to hematopoiesis in steady state.4,5,34 However, 2 recent publications9,10 reported, based on HSC fate-tracking experiments, that LT-HSCs only marginally contribute to steady-state hematopoiesis. Busch et al predicted that hematopoiesis might proceed normally in the absence of LT-HSCs.10 We directly demonstrated that a 15-fold reduction of LT-HSCs did not result in detectable hematopoietic failure for at least 1 year. Moreover, this reduction did not lead to significantly increased cell-cycle activity of the few remaining LT-HSCs. We showed that the residual quiescent LT-HSCs undergo less than a single additional cell division within 6 weeks. The input from remaining LT-HSCs to downstream progenitor compartments was therefore strongly reduced in HSPC-depleted mice vs controls. In spite of this reduced total input from LT-HSCs, steady-state hematopoiesis was not compromised. Moreover, cell-cycle activity of residual LT-HSCs did not correlate with depletion efficiency, arguing against compensation of LT-HSC depletion by increased proliferation of the few remaining HSCs.
Depending on the intensity of the depletion protocol, LT-HSCs were reduced to minimal or undetectable numbers in the first days after depletion as determined by immunophenotype and competitive repopulation assays. The population showed some initial recovery within the next few weeks but then stagnated below 10% of normal numbers for up to 28 weeks. It is likely that the few residual LT-HSCs (∼50 HSCs per mouse, assuming a total BM cellularity of 3 × 108 per mouse35 and an initial HSC frequency of 1 in 6.2 × 106 WBMCs), which had escaped induced elimination, partially replenished the LT-HSC pool initially after HSPC depletion. This partial expansion may account for the reduced repopulation activity upon transplantation of purified HSCs from depleted donor mice as proliferative history was shown to be critical for repopulation potential of HSCs.4,5,31 Earlier studies36-38 reported that upon transplantation into irradiated or kit hypomorphic recipients, LT-HSCs do expand initially but never arrive at LT-HSC numbers of normal mice. Our data clearly show that the limited LT-HSC expansion was not a peculiarity of transplantation into irradiated or kit-deficient hosts but rather reflects an inherent property of LT-HSCs in their physiological niche. This limited HSC reexpansion was not observed in an earlier report of HSPC depletion using a CD117-blocking antibody.39 In this study, immunophenotypic LT-HSCs fully recovered within 23 days after treatment, but the recovery of functional HSC activity was not analyzed. The persistent depletion of immunophenotypic and functional LT-HSCs in our study was neither caused by CreERT-mediated genotoxicity, long half-life of TAM or its metabolites, ligand-independent CreERT activation nor by damage to hematopoietic niche cells.
We hypothesize that the initial HSC expansion ceases as soon as the demand for new blood cells is met by the hematopoietic system. Even exposure of HSPC-depleted mice to hematopoietic stress and challenges reported to recruit quiescent HSCs into cycle, including 5-FU,40 G-CSF,8 or pI:C,6 did not result in expansion of the LT-HSC compartment to its normal size. The reason for limited expansion of LT-HSCs could lie in the absence of proliferative stimuli for these cells, divisions of which must be restricted to a minimum required for efficient hematopoiesis in order to protect them against accumulation of replication-associated DNA damage and exhaustion.41
In contrast to the very limited reexpansion of HSCs, the different progenitor populations showed rapid and robust recovery after HSPC depletion. This finding argues for potent self-renewal capacity of primitive progenitors in situ, which has been underrated so far by classical transplantation experiments.
We report that ablation of mature blood cells including erythrocytes and platelets as well as enforced myelopoiesis by G-CSF administration was tolerated by HSPC-depleted mice. These findings question the necessity of LT-HSC activation to acutely provide an influx of progenitor cells in situations of increased demand for blood cells. Only elimination of the majority of cycling cells by 5-FU compromised the hematopoietic system of HSPC-depleted animals, demonstrating that normal numbers of HSCs and progenitors are essential to cope with myeloablation. This observation did not result from increased sensitivity of HSCs and progenitor cells to 5-FU in HSPC-depleted mice, as these cells remain quiescent despite depletion. Our experiments do not resolve whether myeloablation by 5-FU is compensated primarily by LT-HSCs or rather by progenitors or both.
If hematopoiesis proceeds normally despite reduction of LT-HSCs to below 10% of physiological numbers, why is the hematopoietic system equipped with so many of these cells? The function of the large size of the LT-HSC pool may be to maintain a low-level input of new progenitor cells from the LT-HSC compartment for the lifespan of the animal with only minimal numbers of cell divisions demanded from an individual HSC, protecting it from replication-associated DNA damage. An explanation for the continuous low-level activity and contribution of LT-HSCs would be the need for constant cell-cycle entry to maintain genomic integrity as exit from quiescence was shown to promote error-free DNA damage repair,42 whereas quiescence favors error-prone repair mechanisms.43
For the first time, we directly show that the majority of the LT-HSC population is dispensable for steady-state hematopoiesis and that blood cell generation can be maintained by progenitor cells with minimal input from residual HSCs. Our finding that acute hematopoietic stressors were tolerated by HSPC-depleted mice further proves the so-far underrated regenerative capacity of progenitor cells.
The online version of this article contains a data supplement.
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Acknowledgments
The authors thank Livia Schulze, Christa Haase, Tobias Häring, Doreen Ussath, and Christina Hiller for expert technical assistance; Frank Buchholz, Sebastian Gerdes, Cristina Lo Celso, and Werner Müller for scientific discussions; and Nicole Mende for help with niche cell analysis.
This work was supported by the German Research Foundation (Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [DFG]) through grant SFB 655 B11 (A.R.), the Excellence Initiative of the German federal and state governments “Support the best” (ZUK64) (A.R.), and Technische Universität Dresden Medical Faculty “MeDDrive 2012 & 2015” grants (A.G.). K.B.S. was awarded a fellowship from the Dresden International PhD program. C.W. was supported by DFG WA2837, SFB-655 B9, FOR2033-A03, and by funding from European Union 7th FP, grant no. 261387 (CELL-PID). T.G. was supported by Fritz Thyssen Stiftung (10.14.2.153) and DFG (GR 4857/1-1). T.Z. was supported by the German Federal Ministry of Research and Education, grant no. 031A315 (MessAge) and grant no. 031A424 (HaematoOpt).
Authorship
Contribution: K.B.S., A.G., and M.N.F.M. performed experiments; A.G. and K.B.S. designed experiments and analyzed data; T.Z. and I.R. performed statistical analysis; D.V. and J.R.G. provided essential materials; T.G. and J.R.G. discussed data; C.W. advised the study; and A.G. and A.R. conceived the study and wrote the manuscript.
Conflict-of-interest disclosure: The authors declare no competing financial interests.
Correspondence: Alexander Gerbaulet, Institute for Immunology, Carl Gustav Carus Faculty of Medicine, Technische Universität Dresden, Fetscherstr 74, 01307 Dresden, Germany; e-mail: [email protected].