Abstract:
Myeloid cell heterogeneity is known but whether it is cell-intrinsic or environmentally-directed remains unclear. Here, an inducible/reversible system pausing myeloid differentiation allowed definition of clone-specific functions that clustered monocytes into subsets with distinctive molecular features. These subsets were orthogonal to the classical/non-classical categorization and had inherent, restricted characteristics that did not shift under homeostasis, post-irradiation or with infectious stress. Rather, their functional fate was constrained by chromatin accessibility established at or before the granulocyte-monocyte or monocyte-dendritic progenitor level. Subsets of primary monocytes had differential ability to control distinct infectious agents in vivo. Therefore, monocytes are a heterogeneous population of functionally restricted subtypes defined by the epigenome of their progenitors that are differentially selected by physiologic challenges with limited plasticity to transition from one subset to another.