Litcius/Paper detail

Regulation of the hematopoietic stem cell pool by C-Kit–associated trogocytosis

Xin Gao, Randall S. Carpenter, Philip E. Boulais, Dachuan Zhang, Christopher R. Marlein, Huihui Li, Matthew Smith, David J. Chung, Maria Maryanovich, Britta Will, Ulrich Steidl, Paul S. Frenette

2024Science16 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) are routinely mobilized from the bone marrow (BM) to the blood circulation for clinical transplantation. However, the precise mechanisms by which individual stem cells exit the marrow are not understood. This study identified cell-extrinsic and molecular determinants of a mobilizable pool of blood-forming stem cells. We found that a subset of HSCs displays macrophage-associated markers on their cell surface. Although fully functional, these HSCs are selectively niche-retained as opposed to stem cells lacking macrophage markers, which exit the BM upon forced mobilization. Macrophage markers on HSCs could be acquired through direct transfer by trogocytosis, regulated by receptor tyrosine-protein kinase C-Kit (CD117), from BM-resident macrophages in mouse and human settings. Our study provides proof of concept that adult stem cells utilize trogocytosis to rapidly establish and activate function-modulating molecular mechanisms.

Topics & Concepts

Stem cellHaematopoiesisBiologyCell biologyHematopoietic stem cellBone marrowStem cell factorProto-Oncogene Proteins c-kitMacrophageAdult stem cellEndothelial stem cellImmunologyGeneticsIn vitroHematopoietic Stem Cell TransplantationImmune Cell Function and InteractionImmune cells in cancer