Litcius/Paper detail

Hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells are present in healthy gingiva tissue

Siddharth Krishnan, Kelly Wemyss, Ian Prise, Flora A. McClure, Conor O’Boyle, Hayley Bridgeman, Tovah N. Shaw, John R. Grainger, Joanne E. Konkel

2021The Journal of Experimental Medicine19 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Hematopoietic stem cells reside in the bone marrow, where they generate the effector cells that drive immune responses. However, in response to inflammation, some hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells (HSPCs) are recruited to tissue sites and undergo extramedullary hematopoiesis. Contrasting with this paradigm, here we show residence and differentiation of HSPCs in healthy gingiva, a key oral barrier in the absence of overt inflammation. We initially defined a population of gingiva monocytes that could be locally maintained; we subsequently identified not only monocyte progenitors but also diverse HSPCs within the gingiva that could give rise to multiple myeloid lineages. Gingiva HSPCs possessed similar differentiation potentials, reconstitution capabilities, and heterogeneity to bone marrow HSPCs. However, gingival HSPCs responded differently to inflammatory insults, responding to oral but not systemic inflammation. Combined, we highlight a novel pathway of myeloid cell development at a healthy barrier, defining a gingiva-specific HSPC network that supports generation of a proportion of the innate immune cells that police this barrier.

Topics & Concepts

HaematopoiesisProgenitor cellBone marrowImmunologyMyeloidStem cellInflammationBiologyImmune systemPopulationInnate immune systemMonocyteCell biologyMedicineEnvironmental healthHematopoietic Stem Cell TransplantationImmune cells in cancerMesenchymal stem cell research