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Blood, 1 April 2008, Vol. 111, No. 7, pp. 3305-3306.
AGM: maternity ward or finishing school?THE WALTER AND ELIZA HALL INSTITUTE OF MEDICAL RESEARCH
In this issue of Blood, Lux and colleagues and Ghiaur and colleagues shed new light on the controversy of whether hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) arise in the yolk sac (YS) or the aorta-gonad-mesonephros (AGM) region.
Two studies using mutant mice have reopened this question. Lux and colleagues studied Ncx1–/– mice that lacked a beating heart and circulation. Before death at embryonic day 11, YS hematopoiesis was normal but the body (AGM/FL) lacked hematopoietic cells. They concluded that all definitive HSCs are derived from the YS. A similar conclusion was reached by Ghiaur and colleagues based on studies of Rac1–/– mice, whose cells exhibit defective migration to hematopoietic sites. Again, hematopoiesis was normal in the YS but none was present in the embryo. It could be argued in both cases that HSCs of any origin would be unlikely to develop or seed in a dying embryo. If this is not an issue, neither study actually documents the migration of YS cells to the FL. The studies merely show that YS-cell migration is necessary for FL hematopoiesis. An explanation that would be compatible with all of the conflicting information is to propose that HSCs do arise in the YS, but to become definitive, they must first migrate to the AGM region, where local inductive influences convert the cells to definitive HSCs. In essence, the AGM region is not a maternity ward in which HSCs are born de novo, but rather is a highly specialized finishing school transforming promising YS cells into genuine HSCs. The developing HSCs in the AGM region would then be YS migrants and not cells derived from local HSC precursors.
Why might these developmental questions matter? If the YS is the sole origin of HSCs, then the initiation of hematopoiesis is a finite event that, after the disappearance of the YS, can never be repeated in adult life. If, on the other hand, the AGM region is the true source of HSCs, hematopoiesis has been initiated within the body and, in principle at least, might one day be able to be recapitulated in adult life. If the finishing school proposal is correct, we need to accept that the initiation of hematopoiesis, like the formation of the gonads, is a finite developmental event.
Footnotes
Conflict-of-interest disclosure: The author declares no competing financial interests.
REFERENCES
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