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Mechanisms of blood homeostasis: lineage tracking and a neutral model of cell populations in rhesus macaques

Overview of attention for article published in BMC Biology, October 2015
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Title
Mechanisms of blood homeostasis: lineage tracking and a neutral model of cell populations in rhesus macaques
Published in
BMC Biology, October 2015
DOI 10.1186/s12915-015-0191-8
Pubmed ID
Authors

Sidhartha Goyal, Sanggu Kim, Irvin SY Chen, Tom Chou

Abstract

How a potentially diverse population of hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) differentiates and proliferates to supply more than 10(11) mature blood cells every day in humans remains a key biological question. We investigated this process by quantitatively analyzing the clonal structure of peripheral blood that is generated by a population of transplanted lentivirus-marked HSCs in myeloablated rhesus macaques. Each transplanted HSC generates a clonal lineage of cells in the peripheral blood that is then detected and quantified through deep sequencing of the viral vector integration sites (VIS) common within each lineage. This approach allowed us to observe, over a period of 4-12 years, hundreds of distinct clonal lineages. While the distinct clone sizes varied by three orders of magnitude, we found that collectively, they form a steady-state clone size-distribution with a distinctive shape. Steady-state solutions of our model show that the predicted clone size-distribution is sensitive to only two combinations of parameters. By fitting the measured clone size-distributions to our mechanistic model, we estimate both the effective HSC differentiation rate and the number of active HSCs. Our concise mathematical model shows how slow HSC differentiation followed by fast progenitor growth can be responsible for the observed broad clone size-distribution. Although all cells are assumed to be statistically identical, analogous to a neutral theory for the different clone lineages, our mathematical approach captures the intrinsic variability in the times to HSC differentiation after transplantation.

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The data shown below were compiled from readership statistics for 49 Mendeley readers of this research output. Click here to see the associated Mendeley record.

Geographical breakdown

Country Count As %
Unknown 49 100%

Demographic breakdown

Readers by professional status Count As %
Student > Ph. D. Student 16 33%
Researcher 9 18%
Other 4 8%
Student > Master 3 6%
Student > Bachelor 2 4%
Other 4 8%
Unknown 11 22%
Readers by discipline Count As %
Physics and Astronomy 10 20%
Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology 9 18%
Agricultural and Biological Sciences 4 8%
Immunology and Microbiology 4 8%
Mathematics 3 6%
Other 9 18%
Unknown 10 20%