Characterization of naked mole-rat hematopoiesis reveals unique stem and progenitor cell patterns and neotenic traits
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ABSTRACT: Naked mole-rats are the longest-lived rodents yet their stem cell characteristics remain enigmatic. Here, we comprehensively mapped the naked mole-rat hematopoietic landscape and identified unique features likely contributing to longevity. Adult naked mole-rats form red blood cells in spleen and marrow, which comprise a myeloid bias towards granulopoiesis together with decreased B-lymphopoiesis. Remarkably, youthful blood and marrow single-cell transcriptomes and cell compositions are largely maintained until at least middle age. Similar to primates, the primitive stem and progenitor cell (HSPC) compartment is marked by CD34 and THY1. Stem cell polarity is seen for Tubulin but not CDC42, and is not lost until 12 years of age. HSPC respiration rates are as low as in purified human stem cells, in concert with a strong expression signature for fatty acid metabolism. The pool of quiescent stem cells is higher than in mice, and the cell cycle of hematopoietic cells is prolonged. By characterizing the naked mole-rat hematopoietic landscape we identified resilience phenotypes, such as an increased quiescent HSPC compartment, absence of age-related decline and neotenic traits likely geared towards longevity.
SUBMITTER: Dr. Stephan Emmrich
PROVIDER: S-SCDT-EMBOJ-2021-109694 | biostudies-other |
REPOSITORIES: biostudies-other
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