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Osterix marks distinct waves of primitive and definitive stromal progenitors during bone marrow development.


ABSTRACT: Mesenchymal stem and progenitor cells (MSPCs) contribute to bone marrow (BM) homeostasis by generating multiple types of stromal cells. MSPCs can be labeled in the adult BM by Nestin-GFP, whereas committed osteoblast progenitors are marked by Osterix expression. However, the developmental origin and hierarchical relationship of stromal cells remain largely unknown. Here, by using a lineage-tracing system, we describe three distinct waves of contributions of Osterix(+) cells in the BM. First, Osterix(+) progenitors in the fetal BM contribute to nascent bone tissues and transient stromal cells that are replaced in the adult marrow. Second, Osterix-expressing cells perinatally contribute to osteolineages and long-lived BM stroma, which have characteristics of Nestin-GFP(+) MSPCs. Third, Osterix labeling in the adult marrow is osteolineage-restricted, devoid of stromal contribution. These results uncover a broad expression profile of Osterix and raise the intriguing possibility that distinct waves of stromal cells, primitive and definitive, may organize the developing BM.

SUBMITTER: Mizoguchi T 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC4051418 | biostudies-literature | 2014 May

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Osterix marks distinct waves of primitive and definitive stromal progenitors during bone marrow development.

Mizoguchi Toshihide T   Pinho Sandra S   Ahmed Jalal J   Kunisaki Yuya Y   Hanoun Maher M   Mendelson Avital A   Ono Noriaki N   Kronenberg Henry M HM   Frenette Paul S PS  

Developmental cell 20140501 3


Mesenchymal stem and progenitor cells (MSPCs) contribute to bone marrow (BM) homeostasis by generating multiple types of stromal cells. MSPCs can be labeled in the adult BM by Nestin-GFP, whereas committed osteoblast progenitors are marked by Osterix expression. However, the developmental origin and hierarchical relationship of stromal cells remain largely unknown. Here, by using a lineage-tracing system, we describe three distinct waves of contributions of Osterix(+) cells in the BM. First, Ost  ...[more]

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