An in vitro platform supports generation of human innate lymphoid cells from CD34+ hematopoietic progenitors that recapitulate ex vivo identity

Basic information
Cell
10,512
Sample
6

Technology
10X Genomics
Omics
scRNA-seq,CITE-seq
Source
umbilical cord blood

Dataset ID
34453879
Platform
Illumina NovaSeq 6000
Species
Human
Disease
Healthy
Age range
0 - 0
Update date
2021-10-12
Summary

Innate lymphoid cells (ILCs) are critical effectors of innate immunity and inflammation, whose development and activation pathways make for attractive therapeutic targets. However, human ILC generation has not been systematically explored, and previous in vitro investigations relied on the analysis of few markers or cytokines, which are suboptimal to assign lineage identity. Here, we developed a platform that reliably generated human ILC lineages from CD34+ hematopoietic progenitors derived from cord blood and bone marrow. We showed that one culture condition is insufficient to generate all ILC subsets, and instead, distinct combination of cytokines and Notch signaling are essential. The identity of natural killer (NK)/ILC1s, ILC2s, and ILC3s generated in vitro was validated by protein expression, functional assays, and both global and single-cell transcriptome analysis, recapitulating the signatures and functions of their ex vivo ILC counterparts. These data represent a resource to aid in clarifying ILC biology and differentiation.

Overall design

To be supplemented.

Contributors

Daniela Carolina Hernández 1, Kerstin Juelke 2, Nils Christian Müller 2, Pawel Durek 3, Bilge Ugursu 2, Mir-Farzin Mashreghi 4, Timo Rückert 2, Chiara Romagnani 5

Contact

romagnani@drfz.de.(Chiara Romagnani)

snRNA-Seq
Sample nameSample titleDiseaseGenderAgeSourceTreatmentTechnologyPlatformOmicsSample IDDataset IDAction
No data available