Single-cell multiomics of pediatric BM reveals age-dependent differences in lineage differentiation linked to stromal cell heterogeneity

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Abstract

Childhood is critical for hematopoietic development and the onset of hematologic diseases. To explore hematopoietic changes from infancy through adolescence, we generated a multi-modal single-cell atlas capturing mRNA and surface protein expression of 90.710 bone marrow (BM) cells. This includes hematopoietic stem/progenitor cells and mesenchymal stromal cells, from seven pediatric individuals and two young adults. We demonstrate that young pediatric BM is distinct from adolescents/young adults (AYA), shifting from B-lineage dominance in early childhood to myeloid and T-lineage bias in adolescence. We uncover two distinct lymphoid progenitors (LyPs) subsets regulating this shift: CD127-positive LyPs with B-lineage output, most abundant in early childhood, and CD127-negative LyPs with lymphoid and myeloid features, more common in AYAs. Age-related changes in stromal composition and signaling, mediated by IL-7 and TGF-β1, correspond with this lineage shift. This study provides an in-depth resource for understanding healthy hematologic development and potential early-life perturbations underlying pediatric hematologic diseases.

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