Development of an in vivo model to study clonal lineage relationships in hematopoietic cells using Brainbow2.1/Confetti mice

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Abstract

Hematopoietic stem cells maintain the homeostasis of all blood cell progeny during development and repopulation-demanding events. To study the lineage relationships during hematopoiesis, increasingly complex cell tracing models are being developed. In this study, we describe adaptations to the original R26R-Confetti mouse model, which subsequently offers a relatively easy approach to study low complexity clonality during hematopoiesis, with special focus on B and T lymphocyte development. This protocol employs spatiotemporal Cre expression controlled by gammaretroviral transduction for efficient fluorescent protein cell marking. Transplantation of fluorescently marked Lin- cKit+ hematopoietic progenitor cells into Rag1-/- mice, resulted in the visualization of differentially contributing stem cell clones to various lineages. Our methodology is useful to study questions in fundamental and preclinical hematopoietic research and in vivo B- and T-cell development.

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De Roo, J. J. D., Vloemans, S. A., Vrolijk, H., De Haas, E. F. E., & Staal, F. J. T. (2019). Development of an in vivo model to study clonal lineage relationships in hematopoietic cells using Brainbow2.1/Confetti mice. Future Science OA, 5(10). https://doi.org/10.2144/fsoa-2019-0083

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