Govindarajah Vinothini, Lee Jung-Mi, Solomon Michael, Goddard Bryan, Nayak Ramesh, Nattamai Kalpana, Geiger Hartmut, Salomonis Nathan, Cancelas Jose A, Reynaud Damien
Stem Cell Program, Division of Experimental Hematology and Cancer Biology, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, OH.
Hoxworth Blood Center, University of Cincinnati College of Medicine, Cincinnati, OH.
Blood Adv. 2020 Nov 10;4(21):5512-5526. doi: 10.1182/bloodadvances.2020001826.
Hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) activity is tightly controlled to ensure the integrity of the hematopoietic system during the organism's lifetime. How the HSC compartment maintains its long-term fitness in conditions of chronic stresses associated with systemic metabolic disorders is poorly understood. In this study, we show that obesity functionally affects the long-term function of the most immature engrafting HSC subpopulation. We link this altered regenerative activity to the oxidative stress and the aberrant constitutive activation of the AKT signaling pathway that characterized the obese environment. In contrast, we found minor disruptions of the HSC function in obese mice at steady state, suggesting that active mechanisms could protect the HSC compartment from its disturbed environment. Consistent with this idea, we found that FOXO proteins in HSCs isolated from obese mice become insensitive to their normal upstream regulators such as AKT, even during intense oxidative stress. We established that hyperglycemia, a key condition associated with obesity, is directly responsible for the alteration of the AKT-FOXO axis in HSCs and their abnormal oxidative stress response. As a consequence, we observed that HSCs isolated from a hyperglycemic environment display enhanced resistance to oxidative stress and DNA damage. Altogether, these results indicate that chronic metabolic stresses associated with obesity and/or hyperglycemia affect the wiring of the HSCs and modify their oxidative stress response. These data suggest that the uncoupling of FOXO from its environmental regulators could be a key adaptive strategy that promotes the survival of the HSC compartment in obesity.
造血干细胞(HSC)活性受到严格调控,以确保生物体一生中造血系统的完整性。目前人们对HSC区室在与系统性代谢紊乱相关的慢性应激条件下如何维持其长期健康状况了解甚少。在本研究中,我们表明肥胖在功能上影响最不成熟的移植性HSC亚群的长期功能。我们将这种改变的再生活性与肥胖环境所特有的氧化应激和AKT信号通路的异常组成性激活联系起来。相比之下,我们发现稳态下肥胖小鼠的HSC功能仅有轻微破坏,这表明存在积极的机制可以保护HSC区室免受其紊乱环境的影响。与此观点一致,我们发现从肥胖小鼠分离的HSC中的FOXO蛋白对其正常上游调节因子(如AKT)变得不敏感,即使在强烈氧化应激期间也是如此。我们确定,与肥胖相关的关键条件高血糖直接导致HSC中AKT-FOXO轴的改变及其异常的氧化应激反应。因此,我们观察到从高血糖环境中分离的HSC对氧化应激和DNA损伤具有增强的抗性。总之,这些结果表明与肥胖和/或高血糖相关的慢性代谢应激会影响HSC的信号通路并改变其氧化应激反应。这些数据表明FOXO与其环境调节因子的解偶联可能是促进肥胖状态下HSC区室存活的关键适应性策略。