Department of Biotechnology
inStem (Institute for Stem Cell Science and Regenerative Medicine)

Metabolic adaptation pilots the differentiation of human hematopoietic cells.

Publication Type

Journal Article

Date of Publication

August 1, 2024

Journal

Life science alliance

Volume/Issue

7/8

ISSN

2575-1077

A continuous supply of energy is an essential prerequisite for survival and represents the highest priority for the cell. We hypothesize that cell differentiation is a process of optimization of energy flow in a changing environment through phenotypic adaptation. The mechanistic basis of this hypothesis is provided by the established link between core energy metabolism and epigenetic covalent modifications of chromatin. This theory predicts that early metabolic perturbations impact subsequent differentiation. To test this, we induced transient metabolic perturbations in undifferentiated human hematopoietic cells using pharmacological inhibitors targeting key metabolic reactions. We recorded changes in chromatin structure and gene expression, as well as phenotypic alterations by single-cell ATAC and RNA sequencing, time-lapse microscopy, and flow cytometry. Our observations suggest that these metabolic perturbations are shortly followed by alterations in chromatin structure, leading to changes in gene expression. We also show that these transient fluctuations alter the differentiation potential of the cells.

Alternate Journal

Life Sci Alliance

PubMed ID

38802246

PubMed Central ID

PMC11130395

Authors

Laëtitia Racine
Romuald Parmentier
Shreyas Niphadkar
Julie Chhun
Jean-Alain Martignoles
François Delhommeau
Sunil Laxman
Andras Paldi

Keywords

Cell Differentiation
Hematopoietic Stem Cells
Humans
Epigenesis, Genetic
Energy Metabolism
Chromatin
Adaptation, Physiological
Single-Cell Analysis