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1.Stem cells reside in specialized microenvironments that precisely regulate their behavior. For this reason they are best studied in their in vivo context. A new paper from our lab describes a method for long-term imaging & quantitative analysis of hematopoiesis in vivo in flies

27,023 görüntüleme • 3 yıl önce •via X (Twitter)

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2. In our paper, now out in @eLife, we use organ culture, genetically encoded markers of cell proliferation/differentiation, & automated quantitative image analysis to study the process of fly hematopoiesis at single cell resolution in its original context

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3. Some of our key findings: first, we show for the first time that blood progenitors in the fly undergo symmetric cell divisions consistent w/ self-renewal. (for example in the video below we image the progenitor marker dome-MESO-GFP)

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4. Second, we show that the timing of blood progenitor division is linked to cell size & is spatially oriented. With 90% of cell vision oriented along the plane defined by the heart (which, since we use a cylindrical coordinate system, we refer to as the ρ plane).

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5. Third, using genetically encoded markers for stemness & differentiation we tracked the kinetics of differentiation in real time. Let's start w/ this movie, showing a cytoplasmic stemness marker (green) being turned off & a nuclear marker for mature blood cells being turned on.

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6. This approach allowed us to identify 2 distinct modes (or trajectories) of differentiation from progenitor to mature blood cell. These are shown in the movies below. The green (stemness marker) & red (mature cell marker) levels of a single progenitor were sampled over time.

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7. The 1st trajectory (which for various reasons we call "sigmoid") involves shutting down stemness marker & then turning on mature cell markers. The 2nd ("linear") trajectory starts w/ high levels of both stemness & mature cell markers & then turning off the stemness marker.

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8. Following bacterial infection (orange bars in the figure below), flies increase hematopoiesis massively in order to produce infection fighting immune cells. We find that this is achieved by a large increase in the number of events of the 2nd, linear, differentiation pathway.

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9. Overall, our results show that even subtle shifts in proliferation & differentiation kinetics can have a large impact, in aggregate, to transform blood progenitors from a quiescent to an activated state.

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10. These & many other observations are found in the paper now online. This was a heroic effort on the part of @KevinYLHo1 & Rosalyn Carr, an amazingly talented undergrad who wrote all the image analysis code. Another grad student, Sasha Dvoskin made other key contributions

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11. I will leave you w/ one last fun movie where we used the FUCCI system to follow a dividing progenitor as it transition through the cell cycle.

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