The impact of aging on primate hematopoiesis as interrogated by clonal tracking

KR Yu, DA Espinoza, C Wu, L Truitt… - Blood, The Journal …, 2018 - ashpublications.org
KR Yu, DA Espinoza, C Wu, L Truitt, TH Shin, S Chen, X Fan, IM Yabe, S Panch, SG Hong…
Blood, The Journal of the American Society of Hematology, 2018ashpublications.org
Age-associated changes in hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells (HSPCs) have been
carefully documented in mouse models but poorly characterized in primates and humans.
To investigate clinically relevant aspects of hematopoietic aging, we compared the clonal
output of thousands of genetically barcoded HSPCs in aged vs young macaques after
autologous transplantation. Aged macaques showed delayed emergence of output from
multipotent (MP) clones, with persistence of lineage-biased clones for many months after …
Abstract
Age-associated changes in hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells (HSPCs) have been carefully documented in mouse models but poorly characterized in primates and humans. To investigate clinically relevant aspects of hematopoietic aging, we compared the clonal output of thousands of genetically barcoded HSPCs in aged vs young macaques after autologous transplantation. Aged macaques showed delayed emergence of output from multipotent (MP) clones, with persistence of lineage-biased clones for many months after engraftment. In contrast to murine aging models reporting persistence of myeloid-biased HSPCs, aged macaques demonstrated persistent output from both B-cell and myeloid-biased clones. Clonal expansions of MP, myeloid-biased, and B-biased clones occurred in aged macaques, providing a potential model for human clonal hematopoiesis of indeterminate prognosis. These results suggest that long-term MP HSPC output is impaired in aged macaques, resulting in differences in the kinetics and lineage reconstitution patterns between young and aged primates in an autologous transplantation setting.
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