Evi-1 is a transcriptional target of mixed-lineage leukemia oncoproteins in hematopoietic stem cells.
Ecotropic viral integration site-1 (Evi-1) is a nuclear transcription factor that plays an essential role in the regulation of hematopoietic stem cells. Aberrant expression of Evi-1 has been reported in up to 10% of patients with acute myeloid leukemia and is a diagnostic marker that predicts a poor outcome. Although chromosomal rearrangement involving the Evi-1 gene is one of the major causes of Evi-1 activation,overexpression of Evi-1 is detected in a subgroup of acute myeloid leukemia patients without any chromosomal abnormalities,which indicates the presence of other mechanisms for Evi-1 activation. In this study,we found that Evi-1 is frequently up-regulated in bone marrow cells transformed by the mixed-lineage leukemia (MLL) chimeric genes MLL-ENL or MLL-AF9. Analysis of the Evi-1 gene promoter region revealed that MLL-ENL activates transcription of Evi-1. MLL-ENL-mediated up-regulation of Evi-1 occurs exclusively in the undifferentiated hematopoietic population,in which Evi-1 particularly contributes to the propagation of MLL-ENL-immortalized cells. Furthermore,gene-expression analysis of human acute myeloid leukemia cases demonstrated the stem cell-like gene-expression signature of MLL-rearranged leukemia with high levels of Evi-1. Our findings indicate that Evi-1 is one of the targets of MLL oncoproteins and is selectively activated in hematopoietic stem cell-derived MLL leukemic cells.
View Publication
文献
Welch JS et al. (FEB 2011)
Blood 117 8 2460--8
Rara haploinsufficiency modestly influences the phenotype of acute promyelocytic leukemia in mice.
RARA (retinoic acid receptor alpha) haploinsufficiency is an invariable consequence of t(15;17)(q22;q21) translocations in acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL). Retinoids and RARA activity have been implicated in hematopoietic self-renewal and neutrophil maturation. We and others therefore predicted that RARA haploinsufficiency would contribute to APL pathogenesis. To test this hypothesis,we crossed Rara(+/-) mice with mice expressing PML (promyelocytic leukemia)-RARA from the cathepsin G locus (mCG-PR). We found that Rara haploinsufficiency cooperated with PML-RARA,but only modestly influenced the preleukemic and leukemic phenotype. Bone marrow from mCG-PR(+/-) × Rara(+/-) mice had decreased numbers of mature myeloid cells,increased ex vivo myeloid cell proliferation,and increased competitive advantage after transplantation. Rara haploinsufficiency did not alter mCG-PR-dependent leukemic latency or penetrance,but did influence the distribution of leukemic cells; leukemia in mCG-PR(+/-) × Rara(+/-) mice presented more commonly with low to normal white blood cell counts and with myeloid infiltration of lymph nodes. APL cells from these mice were responsive to all-trans retinoic acid and had virtually no differences in expression profiling compared with tumors arising in mCG-PR(+/-) × Rara(+/+) mice. These data show that Rara haploinsufficiency (like Pml haploinsufficiency and RARA-PML) can cooperate with PML-RARA to influence the pathogenesis of APL in mice,but that PML-RARA is the t(15;17) disease-initiating mutation.
View Publication
文献
Zhou L et al. (FEB 2011)
Cancer research 71 3 955--63
Reduced SMAD7 leads to overactivation of TGF-beta signaling in MDS that can be reversed by a specific inhibitor of TGF-beta receptor I kinase.
Even though myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) are characterized by ineffective hematopoiesis,the molecular alterations that lead to marrow failure have not been well elucidated. We have previously shown that the myelosuppressive TGF-β pathway is constitutively activated in MDS progenitors. Because there is conflicting data about upregulation of extracellular TGF-β levels in MDS,we wanted to determine the molecular basis of TGF-β pathway overactivation and consequent hematopoietic suppression in this disease. We observed that SMAD7,a negative regulator of TGF-β receptor I (TBRI) kinase,is markedly decreased in a large meta-analysis of gene expression studies from MDS marrow-derived CD34(+) cells. SMAD7 protein was also found to be significantly decreased in MDS marrow progenitors when examined immunohistochemically in a bone marrow tissue microarray. Reduced expression of SMAD7 in hematopoietic cells led to increased TGF-β-mediated gene transcription and enhanced sensitivity to TGF-β-mediated suppressive effects. The increased TGF-β signaling due to SMAD7 reduction could be effectively inhibited by a novel clinically relevant TBRI (ALK5 kinase) inhibitor,LY-2157299. LY-2157299 could inhibit TGF-β-mediated SMAD2 activation and hematopoietic suppression in primary hematopoietic stem cells. Furthermore,in vivo administration of LY-2157299 ameliorated anemia in a TGF-β overexpressing transgenic mouse model of bone marrow failure. Most importantly,treatment with LY-2157199 stimulated hematopoiesis from primary MDS bone marrow specimens. These studies demonstrate that reduction in SMAD7 is a novel molecular alteration in MDS that leads to ineffective hematopoiesis by activating of TGF-β signaling in hematopoietic cells. These studies also illustrate the therapeutic potential of TBRI inhibitors in MDS.
View Publication
文献
Flygare J et al. (MAR 2011)
Blood 117 12 3435--44
HIF1alpha synergizes with glucocorticoids to promote BFU-E progenitor self-renewal.
With the aim of finding small molecules that stimulate erythropoiesis earlier than erythropoietin and that enhance erythroid colony-forming unit (CFU-E) production,we studied the mechanism by which glucocorticoids increase CFU-E formation. Using erythroid burst-forming unit (BFU-E) and CFU-E progenitors purified by a new technique,we demonstrate that glucocorticoids stimulate the earliest (BFU-E) progenitors to undergo limited self-renewal,which increases formation of CFU-E cells textgreater 20-fold. Interestingly,glucocorticoids induce expression of genes in BFU-E cells that contain promoter regions highly enriched for hypoxia-induced factor 1α (HIF1α) binding sites. This suggests activation of HIF1α may enhance or replace the effect of glucocorticoids on BFU-E self-renewal. Indeed,HIF1α activation by a prolyl hydroxylase inhibitor (PHI) synergizes with glucocorticoids and enhances production of CFU-Es 170-fold. Because PHIs are able to increase erythroblast production at very low concentrations of glucocorticoids,PHI-induced stimulation of BFU-E progenitors thus represents a conceptually new therapeutic window for treating erythropoietin-resistant anemia.
View Publication
文献
Grzywacz B et al. (MAR 2011)
Blood 117 13 3548--58
Natural killer-cell differentiation by myeloid progenitors.
Because lymphoid progenitors can give rise to natural killer (NK) cells,NK ontogeny has been considered to be exclusively lymphoid. Here,we show that rare human CD34(+) hematopoietic progenitors develop into NK cells in vitro in the presence of cytokines (interleukin-7,interleukin-15,stem cell factor,and fms-like tyrosine kinase-3 ligand). Adding hydrocortisone and stromal cells greatly increases the frequency of progenitor cells that give rise to NK cells through the recruitment of myeloid precursors,including common myeloid progenitors and granulocytic-monocytic precursors to the NK-cell lineage. WNT signaling was involved in this effect. Cells at more advanced stages of myeloid differentiation (with increasing expression of CD13 and macrophage colony-stimulating factor receptor [M-CSFR]) could also differentiate into NK cells in the presence of cytokines,stroma,and hydrocortisone. NK cells derived from myeloid precursors (CD56(-)CD117(+)M-CSFR(+)) showed more expression of killer immunoglobulin-like receptors,a fraction of killer immunoglobulin-like receptor-positive-expressing cells that lacked NKG2A,a higher cytotoxicity compared with CD56(-)CD117(+)M-CSFR(-) precursor-derived NK cells and thus resemble the CD56(dim) subset of NK cells. Collectively,these studies show that NK cells can be derived from the myeloid lineage.
View Publication
文献
Larochelle A et al. (FEB 2011)
Blood 117 5 1550--4
Human and rhesus macaque hematopoietic stem cells cannot be purified based only on SLAM family markers.
Various combinations of antibodies directed to cell surface markers have been used to isolate human and rhesus macaque hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs). These protocols result in poor enrichment or require multiple complex steps. Recently,a simple phenotype for HSCs based on cell surface markers from the signaling lymphocyte activation molecule (SLAM) family of receptors has been reported in the mouse. We examined the possibility of using the SLAM markers to facilitate the isolation of highly enriched populations of HSCs in humans and rhesus macaques. We isolated SLAM (CD150(+)CD48(-)) and non-SLAM (not CD150(+)CD48(-)) cells from human umbilical cord blood CD34(+) cells as well as from human and rhesus macaque mobilized peripheral blood CD34(+) cells and compared their ability to form colonies in vitro and reconstitute immune-deficient (nonobese diabetic/severe combined immunodeficiency/interleukin-2 γc receptor(null),NSG) mice. We found that the CD34(+) SLAM population contributed equally or less to colony formation in vitro and to long-term reconstitution in NSG mice compared with the CD34(+) non-SLAM population. Thus,SLAM family markers do not permit the same degree of HSC enrichment in humans and rhesus macaques as in mice.
View Publication
文献
Richie Ehrlich LI et al. (MAR 2011)
Blood 117 9 2618--24
In vitro assays misrepresent in vivo lineage potentials of murine lymphoid progenitors.
The identity of T-cell progenitors that seed the thymus has remained controversial,largely because many studies differ over whether these progenitors retain myeloid potential. Contradictory reports diverge in their use of various in vitro and in vivo assays. To consolidate these discordant findings,we compared the myeloid potential of 2 putative thymus seeding populations,common lymphoid progenitors (CLPs) and multipotent progenitors (MPPs),and the earliest intrathymic progenitor (DN1),using 2 in vitro assays and in vivo readouts. These assays gave contradictory results: CLP and DN1 displayed surprisingly robust myeloid potential on OP9-DL1 in vitro stromal cocultures but displayed little myeloid potential in vivo,as well as in methylcellulose cultures. MPP,on the other hand,displayed robust myeloid potential in all settings. We conclude that stromal cocultures reveal cryptic,but nonphysiologic,myeloid potentials of lymphoid progenitors,providing an explanation for contradictory findings in the field and underscoring the importance of using in vivo assays for the determination of physiologic lineage potentials.
View Publication
文献
Chang M-J et al. (DEC 2010)
Cancer research 70 24 10234--42
Histone H3 lysine 79 methyltransferase Dot1 is required for immortalization by MLL oncogenes.
Chimeric oncoproteins resulting from fusion of MLL to a wide variety of partnering proteins cause biologically distinctive and clinically aggressive acute leukemias. However,the mechanism of MLL-mediated leukemic transformation is not fully understood. Dot1,the only known histone H3 lysine 79 (H3K79) methyltransferase,has been shown to interact with multiple MLL fusion partners including AF9,ENL,AF10,and AF17. In this study,we utilize a conditional Dot1l deletion model to investigate the role of Dot1 in hematopoietic progenitor cell immortalization by MLL fusion proteins. Western blot and mass spectrometry show that Dot1-deficient cells are depleted of the global H3K79 methylation mark. We find that loss of Dot1 activity attenuates cell viability and colony formation potential of cells immortalized by MLL oncoproteins but not by the leukemic oncoprotein E2a-Pbx1. Although this effect is most pronounced for MLL-AF9,we find that Dot1 contributes to the viability of cells immortalized by other MLL oncoproteins that are not known to directly recruit Dot1. Cells immortalized by MLL fusions also show increased apoptosis,suggesting the involvement of Dot1 in survival pathways. In summary,our data point to a pivotal requirement for Dot1 in MLL fusion protein-mediated leukemogenesis and implicate Dot1 as a potential therapeutic target.
View Publication
文献
MacNamara KC et al. (JAN 2011)
Journal of immunology (Baltimore,Md. : 1950) 186 2 1032--43
Infection-induced myelopoiesis during intracellular bacterial infection is critically dependent upon IFN-γ signaling.
Although microbial infections can alter steady-state hematopoiesis,the mechanisms that drive such changes are not well understood. We addressed a role for IFN-γ signaling in infection-induced bone marrow suppression and anemia in a murine model of human monocytic ehrlichiosis,an emerging tick-borne disease. Within the bone marrow of Ehrlichia muris-infected C57BL/6 mice,we observed a reduction in myeloid progenitor cells,as defined both phenotypically and functionally. Infected mice exhibited a concomitant increase in developing myeloid cells within the bone marrow,an increase in the frequency of circulating monocytes,and an increase in splenic myeloid cells. The infection-induced changes in progenitor cell phenotype were critically dependent on IFN-γ,but not IFN-α,signaling. In mice deficient in the IFN-γ signaling pathway,we observed an increase in myeloid progenitor cells and CDllb(lo)Gr1(lo) promyelocytic cells within the bone marrow,as well as reduced frequencies of mature granulocytes and monocytes. Furthermore,E. muris-infected IFN-γR-deficient mice did not exhibit anemia or an increase in circulating monocytes,and they succumbed to infection. Gene transcription studies revealed that IFN-γR-deficient CDllb(lo)Gr1(lo) promyelocytes from E. muris-infected mice exhibited significantly reduced expression of irf-1 and irf-8,both key transcription factors that regulate the differentiation of granulocytes and monocytes. Finally,using mixed bone marrow chimeric mice,we show that IFN-γ-dependent infection-induced myelopoiesis occurs via the direct effect of the cytokine on developing myeloid cells. We propose that,in addition to its many other known roles,IFN-γ acts to control infection by directly promoting the differentiation of myeloid cells that contribute to host defense.
View Publication
文献
Yu S et al. (FEB 2011)
Blood 117 7 2166--78
GABP controls a critical transcription regulatory module that is essential for maintenance and differentiation of hematopoietic stem/progenitor cells.
Maintaining a steady pool of self-renewing hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) is critical for sustained production of multiple blood lineages. Many transcription factors and molecules involved in chromatin and epigenetic modifications have been found to be critical for HSC self-renewal and differentiation; however,their interplay is less understood. The transcription factor GA binding protein (GABP),consisting of DNA-binding subunit GABPα and transactivating subunit GABPβ,is essential for lymphopoiesis as shown in our previous studies. Here we demonstrate cell-intrinsic,absolute dependence on GABPα for maintenance and differentiation of hematopoietic stem/progenitor cells. Through genome-wide mapping of GABPα binding and transcriptomic analysis of GABPα-deficient HSCs,we identified Zfx and Etv6 transcription factors and prosurvival Bcl-2 family members including Bcl-2,Bcl-X(L),and Mcl-1 as direct GABP target genes,underlying its pivotal role in HSC survival. GABP also directly regulates Foxo3 and Pten and hence sustains HSC quiescence. Furthermore,GABP activates transcription of DNA methyltransferases and histone acetylases including p300,contributing to regulation of HSC self-renewal and differentiation. These systematic analyses revealed a GABP-controlled gene regulatory module that programs multiple aspects of HSC biology. Our studies thus constitute a critical first step in decoding how transcription factors are orchestrated to regulate maintenance and multipotency of HSCs.
View Publication
文献
Tchernychev B et al. (DEC 2010)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 107 51 22255--9
Discovery of a CXCR4 agonist pepducin that mobilizes bone marrow hematopoietic cells.
The G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR),chemokine CXC-type receptor 4 (CXCR4),and its ligand,CXCL12,mediate the retention of polymorphonuclear neutrophils (PMNs) and hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells (HSPCs) in the bone marrow. Agents that disrupt CXCL12-mediated chemoattraction of CXCR4-expressing cells mobilize PMNs and HSPCs into the peripheral circulation and are therapeutically useful for HSPC collection before autologous bone marrow transplantation (ABMT). Our aim was to develop unique CXCR4-targeted therapeutics using lipopeptide GPCR modulators called pepducins. A pepducin is a synthetic molecule composed of a peptide derived from the amino acid sequence of one of the intracellular (IC) loops of a target GPCR coupled to a lipid tether. We prepared and screened a small CXCR4-targeted pepducin library and identified several pepducins with in vitro agonist activity,including ATI-2341,whose peptide sequence derives from the first IC loop. ATI-2341 induced CXCR4- and G protein-dependent signaling,receptor internalization,and chemotaxis in CXCR4-expressing cells. It also induced dose-dependent peritoneal recruitment of PMNs when administered i.p. to mice. However,when administered systemically by i.v. bolus,ATI-2341 acted as a functional antagonist and dose-dependently mediated release of PMNs from the bone marrow of both mice and cynomolgus monkeys. ATI-2341-mediated release of granulocyte/macrophage progenitor cells from the bone marrow was confirmed by colony-forming assays. We conclude that ATI-2341 is a potent and efficacious mobilizer of bone marrow PMNs and HSPCs and could represent a previously undescribed therapeutic approach for the recruitment of HSPCs before ABMT.
View Publication
文献
Nishimura K et al. (FEB 2011)
The Journal of biological chemistry 286 6 4760--71
Development of defective and persistent Sendai virus vector: a unique gene delivery/expression system ideal for cell reprogramming.
The ectopic expression of transcription factors can reprogram differentiated tissue cells into induced pluripotent stem cells. However,this is a slow and inefficient process,depending on the simultaneous delivery of multiple genes encoding essential reprogramming factors and on their sustained expression in target cells. Moreover,once cell reprogramming is accomplished,these exogenous reprogramming factors should be replaced with their endogenous counterparts for establishing autoregulated pluripotency. Complete and designed removal of the exogenous genes from the reprogrammed cells would be an ideal option for satisfying this latter requisite as well as for minimizing the risk of malignant cell transformation. However,no single gene delivery/expression system has ever been equipped with these contradictory characteristics. Here we report the development of a novel replication-defective and persistent Sendai virus (SeVdp) vector based on a noncytopathic variant virus,which fulfills all of these requirements for cell reprogramming. The SeVdp vector could accommodate up to four exogenous genes,deliver them efficiently into various mammalian cells (including primary tissue cells and human hematopoietic stem cells) and express them stably in the cytoplasm at a prefixed balance. Furthermore,interfering with viral transcription/replication using siRNA could erase the genomic RNA of SeVdp vector from the target cells quickly and thoroughly. A SeVdp vector installed with Oct4/Sox2/Klf4/c-Myc could reprogram mouse primary fibroblasts quite efficiently; ∼1% of the cells were reprogrammed to Nanog-positive induced pluripotent stem cells without chromosomal gene integration. Thus,this SeVdp vector has potential as a tool for advanced cell reprogramming and for stem cell research.
View Publication