4.7 Article

Blood stem cell PU.1 upregulation is a consequence of differentiation without fast autoregulation

Journal

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL MEDICINE
Volume 219, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

ROCKEFELLER UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1084/jem.20202490

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Swiss National Science Foundation [179490]
  2. European Molecular Biology Organization long-term fellowship
  3. SystemsX.ch
  4. Eidgenoessische Technische Hochschule Zuerich Career Seed Grant
  5. [R01 DK119394]

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By manipulating and quantifying the dynamics of PU.1 protein expression in live differentiating adult HSPCs in vitro, it is found that the upregulation of PU.1 is not caused by fast direct autoregulation but occurs as a later consequence of hematopoietic differentiation.
Transcription factors (TFs) regulate cell fates, and their expression must be tightly regulated. Autoregulation is assumed to regulate many TFs' own expression to control cell fates. Here, we manipulate and quantify the (auto)regulation of PU.1, a TF controlling hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells (HSPCs), and correlate it to their future fates. We generate transgenic mice allowing both inducible activation of PU.1 and noninvasive quantification of endogenous PU.1 protein expression. The quantified HSPC PU.1 dynamics show that PU.1 up-regulation occurs as a consequence of hematopoietic differentiation independently of direct fast autoregulation. In contrast, inflammatory signaling induces fast PU.1 up-regulation, which does not require PU.1 expression or its binding to its own autoregulatory enhancer. However, the increased PU.1 levels induced by inflammatory signaling cannot be sustained via autoregulation after removal of the signaling stimulus. We conclude that PU.1 overexpression induces HSC differentiation before PU.1 up-regulation, only later generating cell types with intrinsically higher PU.1. By manipulating and quantifying the dynamics of PU.1 protein expression in live differentiating adult HSPCs in vitro, Ahmed et al. report that PU.1 upregulation is not caused by fast direct autoregulation but occurs as a later consequence of hematopoietic differentiation.

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