4.8 Article

Regulation of embryonic haematopoietic multipotency by EZH1

Journal

NATURE
Volume 553, Issue 7689, Pages 506-+

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nature25435

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NIH NIDDK [R24-DK092760, R24-DK49216]
  2. NHLBI Progenitor Cell Biology Consortium [U01-HL100001]
  3. NHLBI [R01HL04880]
  4. NIH [R24OD017870-01, K01DK093543, R01DK111430]
  5. NSF Graduate Research Fellowship
  6. T32 NIH Training Grant from BWH Hematology
  7. Leukemia and Lymphoma Society
  8. K99 NIH NHLBI award [1K99HL123484]
  9. Cancer Prevention and Research Institute of Texas (CPRIT) New Investigator award [RR140025]
  10. Howard Hughes Medical Institute

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All haematopoietic cell lineages that circulate in the blood of adult mammals derive from multipotent haematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) 1. By contrast, in the blood of mammalian embryos, lineage-restricted progenitors arise first, independently of HSCs, which only emerge later in gestation2,3. As best defined in the mouse, 'primitive' progenitors first appear in the yolk sac at 7.5 days post-coitum2,3. Subsequently, erythroid-myeloid progenitors that express fetal haemoglobin4, as well as fetal lymphoid progenitors5, develop in the yolk sac and the embryo proper, but these cells lack HSC potential. Ultimately, 'definitive' HSCs with long-term, multilineage potential and the ability to engraft irradiated adults emerge at 10.5 days post-coitum from arterial endothelium in the aorta-gonad-mesonephros and other haemogenic vasculature3. The molecular mechanisms of this reverse progression of haematopoietic ontogeny remain unexplained. We hypothesized that the definitive haematopoietic program might be actively repressed in early embryogenesis through epigenetic silencing6, and that alleviating this repression would elicit multipotency in otherwise lineage-restricted haematopoietic progenitors. Here we show that reduced expression of the Polycomb group protein EZH1 enhances multi-lymphoid output from human pluripotent stem cells. In addition, Ezh1 deficiency in mouse embryos results in precocious emergence of functional definitive HSCs in vivo. Thus, we identify EZH1 as a repressor of haematopoietic multipotency in the early mammalian embryo.

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