4.8 Article

Long-term haematopoietic reconstitution by Trp53-/-p16Ink4a-/-p19Arf-/- multipotent progenitors

Journal

NATURE
Volume 453, Issue 7192, Pages 228-U12

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nature06869

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Haematopoiesis is maintained by a hierarchical system where haematopoietic stem cells ( HSCs) give rise to multipotent progenitors, which in turn differentiate into all types of mature blood cells1. HSCs maintain themselves for the lifetime of the organism because of their ability to self- renew. However, multipotent progenitors lack the ability to self- renew, therefore their mitotic capacity and expansion potential are limited and they are destined to eventually stop proliferating after a finite number of cell divisions(1,2). The molecular mechanisms that limit the proliferation capacity of multipotent progenitors and other more mature progenitors are not fully understood(2,3). Here we show that bone marrow cells from mice deficient in three genes genetically downstream of Bmi1-p16(Ink4a), p19(Arf) and Trp53 ( triple mutant mice; p16(Ink4a) and p19(Arf) are alternative reading frames of the same gene ( also called Cdkn2a) that encode different proteins) - have an approximately 10-fold increase in cells able to reconstitute the blood long term. This increase is associated with the acquisition of long- term reconstitution capacity by cells of the phenotype c-kit(+)Sca-1(+)Flt3(+)CD150(-)CD48(-)Lin(-), which defines multipotent progenitors in wild- type mice(4-6). The pattern of triple mutant multipotent progenitor response to growth factors resembles that of wild- type multipotent progenitors but not wild- type HSCs. These results demonstrate that p16(Ink4a)/p19(Arf) and Trp53 have a central role in limiting the expansion potential of multipotent progenitors. These pathways are commonly repressed in cancer, suggesting a mechanism by which early progenitor cells could gain the ability to self- renew and become malignant with further oncogenic mutations.

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