Hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells acquire distinct DNA-hypermethylation during in vitro culture

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Abstract

Hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells (HPCs) can be maintained in vitro, but the vast majority of their progeny loses stemness during culture. In this study, we compared DNA-methylation (DNAm) profiles of freshly isolated and culture-expanded HPCs. Culture conditions of CD34+ cells - either with or without mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs) - had relatively little impact on DNAm, although proliferation is greatly increased by stromal support. However, all cultured HPCs - even those which remained CD34+ - acquired significant DNA-hypermethylation. DNA-hypermethylation occurred particularly in up-stream promoter regions, shore-regions of CpG islands, binding sites for PU.1, HOXA5 and RUNX1, and it was reflected in differential gene expression and variant transcripts of DNMT3A. Low concentrations of DNAm inhibitors slightly increased the frequency of colony-forming unit initiating cells. Our results demonstrate that HPCs acquire DNA-hypermethylation at specific sites in the genome which is relevant for the rapid loss of stemness during in vitro manipulation.

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Weidner, C. I., Walenda, T., Lin, Q., Wölfler, M. M., Denecke, B., Costa, I. G., … Wagner, W. (2013). Hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells acquire distinct DNA-hypermethylation during in vitro culture. Scientific Reports, 3. https://doi.org/10.1038/srep03372

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