Abstract

The bone marrow (BM) exists heterogeneously as hematopoietic/red or adipocytic/yellow marrow depending on skeletal location, age, and physiological condition. Mouse models and patients undergoing radio/chemotherapy or suffering acute BM failure endure rapid adipocytic conversion of the marrow microenvironment, the so-called “red-to-yellow” transition. Following hematopoietic recovery, such as upon BM transplantation, a “yellow-to-red” transition occurs and functional hematopoiesis is restored. Gold Standards to estimate BM cellular composition are pathologists' assessment of hematopoietic cellularity in hematoxylin and eosin (H&E) stained histological sections as well as volumetric measurements of marrow adiposity with contrast-enhanced micro-computerized tomography (CE-μCT) upon osmium-tetroxide lipid staining. Due to user-dependent variables, reproducibility in longitudinal studies is a challenge for both methods. Here we report the development of a semi-automated image analysis plug-in, MarrowQuant, which employs the open-source software QuPath, to systematically quantify multiple bone components in H&E sections in an unbiased manner. MarrowQuant discerns and quantifies the areas occupied by bone, adipocyte ghosts, hematopoietic cells, and the interstitial/microvascular compartment. A separate feature, AdipoQuant, fragments adipocyte ghosts in H&E-stained sections of extramedullary adipose tissue to render adipocyte area and size distribution. Quantification of BM hematopoietic cellularity with MarrowQuant lies within the range of scoring by four independent pathologists, while quantification of the total adipocyte area in whole bone sections compares with volumetric measurements. Employing our tool, we were able to develop a standardized map of BM hematopoietic cellularity and adiposity in mid-sections of murine C57BL/6 bones in homeostatic conditions, including quantification of the highly predictable red-to-yellow transitions in the proximal section of the caudal tail and in the proximal-to-distal tibia. Additionally, we present a comparative skeletal map induced by lethal irradiation, with longitudinal quantification of the “red-to-yellow-to-red” transition over 2 months in C57BL/6 femurs and tibiae. We find that, following BM transplantation, BM adiposity inversely correlates with kinetics of hematopoietic recovery and that a proximal to distal gradient is conserved. Analysis of in vivo recovery through magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) reveals comparable kinetics. On human trephine biopsies MarrowQuant successfully recognizes the BM compartments, opening avenues for its application in experimental, or clinical contexts that require standardized human BM evaluation.

Highlights

  • Bone marrow adipocytes (BMAds) were long considered as passive fillers of the marrow cavity

  • We found that MarrowQuant measurement of percent Hematopoietic Area (Equation 2) progressed linearly when compared to the mean of the pathologists’ “cellularity” scoring (Equation 1)

  • Skeleton of the Homeostatic C57BL/6 Female Mouse Here we provide for the first time a quantitative BMA skeletal map of the homeostatic C57BL/6 8-weeks-old female mouse, which reveals a transition of low adiposity, red bone marrow (BM) to high adiposity, yellow BM in the proximal to distal regions of the skeleton (Figure 5)

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Summary

Introduction

Bone marrow adipocytes (BMAds) were long considered as passive fillers of the marrow cavity. BMAds appear shortly thereafter and increase throughout juvenile development in a centripetal fashion as the skeleton matures [3]. This reciprocal relationship between adipocytic and hematopoietic content has been known since the enunciation of the “Neumann” law in 1902, describing the age-driven adipocytic conversion of the marrow in distal bones. Upon hematopoietic ablation (e.g., after chemoor radiotherapy) a massive adipocytic conversion has been consistently described in humans and across different mouse strains. The BM is heterogeneous depending on specific skeletal location, age, and physiological condition [reviewed in [6]]

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