Developmental deconvolution of complex organs and tissues at the level of
individual cells remains challenging. Non-invasive genetic fate mapping1 has been widely used, but the low number
of distinct fluorescent marker proteins limits its resolution. Much higher
numbers of cell markers have been generated using viral integration sites2, viral barcodes3, and strategies based on transposons4 and CRISPR/Cas9 genome editing5; however, temporal and tissue-specific induction of
barcodes in situ has not been achieved. Here we report the development of an
artificial DNA recombination locus (termed Polylox) that
enables broadly applicable endogenous barcoding based on the
Cre-loxP recombination system6,7. Polylox
recombination in situ reaches a practical diversity of several hundred thousand
barcodes, allowing tagging of single cells. We have used this experimental
system, combined with fate mapping, to assess haematopoietic stem cell (HSC)
fates in vivo. Classical models of haematopoietic lineage specification assume a
tree with few major branches. More recently, driven in part by the development
of more efficient single-cell assays and improved transplantation efficiencies,
different models have been proposed, in which unilineage priming may occur in
mice and humans at the level of HSCs8–10. We have
introduced barcodes into HSC progenitors in embryonic mice, and found that the
adult HSC compartment is a mosaic of embryo-derived HSC clones, some of which
are unexpectedly large. Most HSC clones gave rise to multilineage or
oligolineage fates, arguing against unilineage priming, and suggesting coherent
usage of the potential of cells in a clone. The spreading of barcodes, both
after induction in embryos and in adult mice, revealed a basic split between
common myeloid-erythroid development and common lymphocyte development,
supporting the long-held but contested view of a tree-like haematopoietic
structure.
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