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Haematopoiesis - Novel tools for modelling normal and perturbed haematopoiesis

Lead Research Organisation: University of York

Abstract

Blood cell production (haematopoiesis) is a finely tuned process, producing trillions of new blood cells daily. Dysregulation leads to a wide array of haematological diseases including bone marrow failure and leukaemia. Despite generating detailed molecular profiles of individual blood forming cells at unprecedented resolution and comprehensively mapping genetic drivers in numerous haematological diseases, we lack effective tools to map and manipulate key cellular subsets involved in normal and stressed haematopoiesis which would provide fundamental insight into disease aetiology and potential intervention strategies.

Our cluster of world-leading experts in developmental and malignant haematopoiesis, the haematopoietic niche, and oligogenic mouse modelling will develop new tools to revolutionise how we study and manipulate haematopoietic/immune-cell function for clinical benefit. Building on our extensive clinical and molecular datasets from normal, post-infection and pre-leukaemic and leukaemic cells, we will develop new tools to precisely map and manipulate haematopoietic cells. These approaches will support fundamental breakthroughs in haematopoiesis and facilitate production of new models with genetic manipulations restricted to highly defined cell populations with temporal regulation. This collaborative network will also involve cross-institutional model-sharing and standardisation, and catalyse disease model development in other fields.

Technical Summary

Despite remarkable progress in the transcriptional and genomic profiling of normal and diseased blood cells, an urgent need exists to develop tools that will permit the dissection of the cellular and molecular mechanisms underpinning normal haematopoiesis and its responses to stress and disease. Tools to accurately map the cellular identity of specific haematopoietic cell subsets in vivo are regularly lacking and even fewer tools exist to selectively manipulate the expression of multiple genes in specific target cells in the correct spatio-temporal manner.

Building on our extensive transcriptomic and genomic datasets from normal, post-infection and pre-leukaemic cells in patients and mouse models, our cluster will work with the Mary Lyon Centre to develop next-generation mouse models, harnessing restricted intersectional recombinase gene expression to precisely map and manipulate haematopoietic cells. Specifically, our work will focus on three key areas: 1) new tools to mark and target unique haematopoietic cell types 2) Improved modelling of complex disease in haematological malignancies with respect to mutation timing and cell of origin and 3) New tools to specifically target normal and diseases cells during development.

People

ORCID iD

 
Description ICR ICL clinical scientist PhD studentship
Amount £270,000 (GBP)
Organisation Cancer Research UK 
Sector Charity/Non Profit
Country United Kingdom
Start 09/2023 
End 09/2026
 
Description MRCequip
Amount £358,000 (GBP)
Funding ID MR/Y002997/1 
Organisation Medical Research Council (MRC) 
Sector Public
Country United Kingdom
Start 07/2023 
End 03/2024
 
Description Understanding the role of bone marrow microenvironment in incomplete count recovery in AML patients following chemotherapy
Amount £39,473 (GBP)
Organisation National Institute for Health and Care Research 
Department NIHR Imperial Biomedical Research Centre
Sector Public
Country United Kingdom
Start 03/2022 
End 11/2022
 
Description David Kent 
Organisation University of York
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution co-leading the MRC mouse genetics network Haematopoiesis cluster theme 1b
Collaborator Contribution intellectual contribution to grant proposals
Impact new transgenic mouse lines being generated
Start Year 2021