Integrated local and systemic communication factors regulate nascent hematopoietic progenitor escape during developmental hematopoiesis
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Mammalian blood cells originate from specialized hemogenic endothelial (HE) cells in major arteries. During the endothelial-to-hematopoietic transition (EHT), nascent hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) bud from the arterial endothelial wall and enter circulation, destined to colonize the fetal liver before ultimately migrating to the bone marrow. Mechanisms and processes that facilitate EHT and the release of nascent HSCs are incompletely understood, but may involve signaling from neighboring vascular endothelial cells, stromal support cells, circulating preformed hematopoietic cells, and/or systemic factors secreted by distal organs. In this study, we used single cell RNA sequencing analysis from human embryonic cells to identify relevant signaling pathways that support nascent HSC release. In addition to intercellular and secreted signaling modalities that have been previously functionally validated to support EHT and/or developmental hematopoiesis in model systems, we identify several novel modalities with plausible mechanisms to support EHT and HSC release. Our findings paint a portrait of the complex interregulated signals from the local niche, circulating hematopoietic/inflammatory cells, and distal fetal liver that support hematopoiesis.