Revised map of the human progenitor hierarchy shows the origin of macrophages and dendritic cells in early lymphoid development

S Doulatov, F Notta, K Eppert, LT Nguyen… - Nature …, 2010 - nature.com
S Doulatov, F Notta, K Eppert, LT Nguyen, PS Ohashi, JE Dick
Nature immunology, 2010nature.com
The classical model of hematopoiesis posits the segregation of lymphoid and myeloid
lineages as the earliest fate decision. The validity of this model in the mouse has been
questioned; however, little is known about the lineage potential of human progenitors. Here
we provide a comprehensive analysis of the human hematopoietic hierarchy by clonally
mapping the developmental potential of seven progenitor classes from neonatal cord blood
and adult bone marrow. Human multilymphoid progenitors, identified as a distinct population …
Abstract
The classical model of hematopoiesis posits the segregation of lymphoid and myeloid lineages as the earliest fate decision. The validity of this model in the mouse has been questioned; however, little is known about the lineage potential of human progenitors. Here we provide a comprehensive analysis of the human hematopoietic hierarchy by clonally mapping the developmental potential of seven progenitor classes from neonatal cord blood and adult bone marrow. Human multilymphoid progenitors, identified as a distinct population of Thy-1neg–loCD45RA+ cells in the CD34+CD38 stem cell compartment, gave rise to all lymphoid cell types, as well as monocytes, macrophages and dendritic cells, which indicated that these myeloid lineages arise in early lymphoid lineage specification. Thus, as in the mouse, human hematopoiesis does not follow a rigid model of myeloid-lymphoid segregation.
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