Isolation of Murine Myeloid Progenitor Populations by CD34/CD150 Surface Markers

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Abstract

Myeloid progenitors are intermediates between Hematopoietic Stem Cells (HSCs) and Myeloid effector progeny. In mouse bone marrow, they are part of the Lineage- cKit+ Sca1- (LK) compartment. To date, most researchers used CD34 and FcγR surface markers for the dissection of this compartment into various populations. Surprisingly, however, this approach does not provide distinct separation by fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS). In this study, we suggest using CD150 instead of FcγR. We re-analyzed published single-cell RNA-Seq data and found that CD34/CD150 provides better sub-populations separation, compared to the “classical” CD34/FcγR-based approach. We confirm our findings by independent FACS analysis. We demonstrate compa-rable differentiation potential of the newly-obtained LK sub-populations, like previous “classical” ones. Therefore, we suggest the CD34/CD150 gating strategy, utilizing commonly-used surface markers, as a robust and reproducible separation of the LK compartment into distinct sub-popula-tions.

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Olender, L., Thapa, R., & Gazit, R. (2022). Isolation of Murine Myeloid Progenitor Populations by CD34/CD150 Surface Markers. Cells, 11(3). https://doi.org/10.3390/cells11030350

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