Origin of hematopoietic progenitors during embryogenesis

International Reviews of Immunology
M OgawaS Nishikawa

Abstract

It has been widely accepted that hematopoietic and endothelial cell lineages diverge from a common progenitor referred to as the hemangioblast. Recently, analyses of the potential of progenitor cells purified from mouse embryos as well as embryonic stem cells differentiating in vitro resolved intermediate stages between mesodermal cells and committed precursors for hematopoietic and endothelial cell lineages. There are two distinct hematopoietic cell lineages which have different origins, i.e., primitive hematopoietic lineage derived from mesoderm or hemangioblasts and definitive hematopoietic lineage derived from endothelial cells. The endothelium is suggested to provide a milieu in which the definitive hematopoietic lineage acquires multiple potentials.

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Citations

May 12, 2012·Stem Cell Research & Therapy·Harold S Bernstein, William C Hyun
Jun 17, 2008·The American Journal of the Medical Sciences·Schlomo Cohen
Sep 1, 2007·Experimental Hematology·Dong ChenChristina Kendziorski
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Dec 20, 2018·Journal of Biological Engineering·Laura AlderferDonny Hanjaya-Putra
Feb 6, 2003·Genes & Development·Hajime Kubo, Kari Alitalo

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