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Chromatin accessibility maps provide evidence of multilineage gene priming in hematopoietic stem cells

Eric W. Martin, Jana Krietsch, Roman E. Reggiardo, Rebekah Sousae, Daniel H. Kim, E. Camilla Forsberg

2021Epigenetics & Chromatin39 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) have the capacity to differentiate into vastly different types of mature blood cells. The epigenetic mechanisms regulating the multilineage ability, or multipotency, of HSCs are not well understood. To test the hypothesis that cis-regulatory elements that control fate decisions for all lineages are primed in HSCs, we used ATAC-seq to compare chromatin accessibility of HSCs with five unipotent cell types. We observed the highest similarity in accessibility profiles between megakaryocyte progenitors and HSCs, whereas B cells had the greatest number of regions with de novo gain in accessibility during differentiation. Despite these differences, we identified cis-regulatory elements from all lineages that displayed epigenetic priming in HSCs. These findings provide new insights into the regulation of stem cell multipotency, as well as a resource to identify functional drivers of lineage fate.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyChromatinStem cellHaematopoiesisGeneticsPriming (agriculture)Computational biologyGeneCell biologyHuman geneticsHematopoietic stem cellEvolutionary biologyBotanyGerminationGenomics and Chromatin DynamicsEpigenetics and DNA MethylationImmunotherapy and Immune Responses