Abstract

Haematopoiesis is the complex developmental process that maintains the turnover of all blood cell lineages. It critically depends on the correct functioning of rare, quiescent haematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) and more numerous, HSC-derived, highly proliferative and differentiating haematopoietic progenitor cells (HPCs). Infection is known to affect HSCs, with severe and chronic inflammatory stimuli leading to stem cell pool depletion, while acute, non-lethal infections exert transient and even potentiating effects. Both whether this paradigm applies to all infections and whether the HSC response is the dominant driver of the changes observed during stressed haematopoiesis remain open questions. We use a mouse model of malaria, based on natural, sporozoite-driven Plasmodium berghei infection, as an experimental platform to gain a global view of haematopoietic perturbations during infection progression. We observe coordinated responses by the most primitive HSCs and multiple HPCs, some starting before blood parasitaemia is detected. We show that, despite highly variable inter-host responses, primitive HSCs become highly proliferative, but mathematical modelling suggests that this alone is not sufficient to significantly impact the whole haematopoietic cascade. We observe that the dramatic expansion of Sca-1+ progenitors results from combined proliferation of direct HSC progeny and phenotypic changes in downstream populations. We observe that the simultaneous perturbation of HSC/HPC population dynamics is coupled with early signs of anaemia onset. Our data uncover a complex relationship between Plasmodium and its host's haematopoiesis and raise the question whether the variable responses observed may affect the outcome of the infection itself and its long-term consequences on the host.

Highlights

  • Haematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) maintain the production of red blood cells (RBCs), white blood cells (WBCs) and platelets throughout the lifespan of vertebrates

  • We have examined the changes induced upon haematopoietic stem and progenitor cell populations in the bone marrow, and relate these to the downstream impact upon the RBC and WBC populations in the peripheral blood, spleen and bone marrow

  • We model the dynamics of haematopoiesis in a highly idealized manner in which four distinct cell populations interact, namely HSCs (S), multipotent and committed progenitor cells (P), and red (R) and white (W ) blood cells

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Summary

Introduction

Haematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) maintain the production of red blood cells (RBCs), white blood cells (WBCs) and platelets throughout the lifespan of vertebrates. Long-term (LT) repopulating stem cells are at the apex of the haematopoietic developmental cascade. Progressive lineage commitment is acquired by progenitor cells and eventually all haematopoietic cell lineages are specified and mature within the bone marrow, from where fully differentiated cells are released into the circulation at a rate of several billion cells/day [2]. The dynamics of this complex hierarchy of cell lineages change during normal development (ageing) and in response to infection by pathogens.

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