4.8 Article

Angiocrine factors from Akt-activated endothelial cells balance self-renewal and differentiation of haematopoietic stem cells

Journal

NATURE CELL BIOLOGY
Volume 12, Issue 11, Pages 1046-U32

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/ncb2108

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Funding

  1. Howard Hughes Medical Institute
  2. Ansary Stem Cell Institute
  3. National Institute of Health [HL097797, U01 HL66592-03, RC1 AI080309]
  4. Qatar National Priorities Research Program
  5. Anbinder and Newmans Own Foundations
  6. Empire State Stem Cell Board
  7. New York State Department of Health [NYS C024180]

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Endothelial cells establish an instructive vascular niche that reconstitutes haematopoietic stem and progenitor cells (HSPCs) through release of specific paracrine growth factors, known as angiocrine factors. However, the mechanism by which endothelial cells balance the rate of proliferation and lineage-specific differentiation of HSPCs is unknown. Here, we demonstrate that Akt activation in endothelial cells, through recruitment of mTOR, but not the FoxO pathway, upregulates specific angiocrine factors that support expansion of CD34-F1t3-KLS HSPCs with long-term haematopoietic stem cell (LT-HSC) repopulation capacity. Conversely, co-activation of Akt-stimulated endothelial cells with p42/44 MAPK shifts the balance towards maintenance and differentiation of the HSPCs. Selective activation of Akt1 in the endothelial cells of adult mice increased the number of colony forming units in the spleen and CD34-F1t3- KLS HSPCs with LT-HSC activity in the bone marrow, accelerating haematopoietic recovery. Therefore, the activation state of endothelial cells modulates reconstitution of HSPCs through the modulation of angiocrine factors, with Akt mTOR-activated endothelial cells supporting the self-renewal of LT-HSCs and expansion of HSPCs, whereas MAPK co-activation favours maintenance and lineagespecific differentiation of HSPCs.

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