38 research outputs found

    M-CSF instructs myeloid lineage fate in single haematopoietic stem cells

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    Under stress conditions such as infection or inflammation the body rapidly needs to generate new blood cells that are adapted to the challenge. Haematopoietic cytokines are known to increase output of specific mature cells by affecting survival, expansion and differentiation of lineage-committed progenitors, but it has been debated whether long-term haematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) are susceptible to direct lineage-specifying effects of cytokines. Although genetic changes in transcription factor balance can sensitize HSCs to cytokine instruction, the initiation of HSC commitment is generally thought to be triggered by stochastic fluctuation in cell-intrinsic regulators such as lineage-specific transcription factors, leaving cytokines to ensure survival and proliferation of the progeny cells. Here we show that macrophage colony-stimulating factor (M-CSF, also called CSF1), a myeloid cytokine released during infection and inflammation, can directly induce the myeloid master regulator PU.1 and instruct myeloid cell-fate change in mouse HSCs, independently of selective survival or proliferation. Video imaging and single-cell gene expression analysis revealed that stimulation of highly purified HSCs with M-CSF in culture resulted in activation of the PU.1 promoter and an increased number of PU.1(+) cells with myeloid gene signature and differentiation potential. In vivo, high systemic levels of M-CSF directly stimulated M-CSF-receptor-dependent activation of endogenous PU.1 protein in single HSCs and induced a PU.1-dependent myeloid differentiation preference. Our data demonstrate that lineage-specific cytokines can act directly on HSCs in vitro and in vivo to instruct a change of cell identity. This fundamentally changes the current view of how HSCs respond to environmental challenge and implicates stress-induced cytokines as direct instructors of HSC fate

    Lymphocyte activation and effector functions

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    Finding Minimal Sets of Informative Genes in Microarray Data

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    ZC3H12C expression in DCs is necessary to prevent lymphadenopathy of skin-draining lymph nodes.

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    The role of RNA-binding proteins of the CCCH-containing family in regulating pro-inflammatory cytokine production and inflammation is increasingly recognized. We have identified ZC3H12C (Regnase-3) as a potential post-transcriptional regulator of Tumor necrosis factor expression and have investigated its role in vivo by generating Zc3h12c-deficient mice that express GFP instead of ZC3H12C. Zc3h12c-deficient mice develop hypertrophic lymph nodes. In the immune system, ZC3H12C expression is mostly restricted to the dendritic cell (DC) populations, and we show that DC-restricted ZC3H12C depletion is sufficient to cause lymphadenopathy. ZC3H12C can regulate Tnf mRNA stability via its RNAse activity in vitro, and we confirmed the role of Tnf in the development of lymphadenopathy. Finally, we found that loss of ZC3H12C did not impact the outcome of skin inflammation in the imiquimod-induced murine model of psoriasis, despite Zc3h12c being identified as a risk factor for psoriasis susceptibility in several GWAS studies. Our data suggest a role for ZC3H12C in DC-driven skin homeostasis

    Specification of the primitive myeloid precursor pool requires signaling through Alk8 in zebrafish

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    In the zebrafish embryo, primitive hematopoiesis initiates in two spatially distinct regions. Rostrally, the cells of the anterior lateral plate mesoderm (ALPM) give rise exclusively to cells of the myeloid lineage in a pu.1-dependent manner [1-5]. Caudally, in the posterior lateral plate mesoderm (PLPM), the expression of gata1 defines a precursor pool that gives rise predominantly to the embryonic erythrocytes [6]. The transcription factor scl acts upstream of both gata1 and pu.1 in these precursor pools, activating a series of conserved transcription factors that cell-autonomously specify either myeloid or erythroid fates [1, 4, 7, 8]. However, the mechanisms underlying the spatial separation of the hematopoietic precursor pools and the induction of differential gene expression within these pools are not well understood. We show here that the Bmp receptor lost-a-fin/alk8 is required for rostral pu.1 expression and myelopoiesis, identifying an early genetic event that distinguishes between the induction of anterior and posterior hematopoiesis. Introducing a constitutively active version of the Alk8 receptor led to increased pu.1 expression, but the role of alk8 was independent of the scl-dependent cell-fate pathway. Furthermore, the role of Alk8 in myelopoiesis was genetically separable from its earlier role in dorsal-ventral embryonic patterning

    Hhex Directly Represses BIM-Dependent Apoptosis to Promote NK Cell Development and Maintenance

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    Hhex encodes a homeobox transcriptional regulator important for embryonic development and hematopoiesis. Hhex is highly expressed in NK cells, and its germline deletion results in significant defects in lymphoid development, including NK cells. To determine if Hhex is intrinsically required throughout NK cell development or for NK cell function, we generate mice that specifically lack Hhex in NK cells. NK cell frequency is dramatically reduced, while NK cell differentiation, IL-15 responsiveness, and function at the cellular level remain largely normal in the absence of Hhex. Increased IL-15 availability fails to fully reverse NK lymphopenia following conditional Hhex deletion, suggesting that Hhex regulates developmental pathways extrinsic to those dependent on IL-15. Gene expression and functional genetic approaches reveal that Hhex regulates NK cell survival by directly binding Bcl2l11 (Bim) and repressing expression of this key apoptotic mediator. These data implicate Hhex as a transcriptional regulator of NK cell homeostasis and immunity.Wilford Goh, Sebastian Scheer, Jacob T. Jackson, Soroor Hediyeh-Zadeh, Rebecca B. Delconte, Iona S. Schuster, Christopher E. Andoniou, Jai Rautela, Mariapia A. Degli-Esposti, Melissa J. Davis, Matthew P. McCormack, Stephen L. Nutt, and Nicholas D. Huntingto

    CIS controls the functional polarization of GM-CSF-derived macrophages

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    The cytokine granulocyte-macrophage-colony stimulating factor (GM-CSF) possesses the capacity to differentiate monocytes into macrophages (MØs) with opposing functions, namely, proinflammatory M1-like MØs and immunosuppressive M2-like MØs. Despite the importance of these opposing biological outcomes, the intrinsic mechanism that regulates the functional polarization of MØs under GM-CSF signaling remains elusive. Here, we showed that GM-CSF-induced MØ polarization resulted in the expression of cytokine-inducible SH2-containing protein (CIS) and that CIS deficiency skewed the differentiation of monocytes toward immunosuppressive M2-like MØs. CIS deficiency resulted in hyperactivation of the JAK-STAT5 signaling pathway, consequently promoting downregulation of the transcription factor Interferon Regulatory Factor 8 (IRF8). Loss- and gain-of-function approaches highlighted IRF8 as a critical regulator of the M1-like polarization program. In vivo, CIS deficiency induced the differentiation of M2-like macrophages, which promoted strong Th2 immune responses characterized by the development of severe experimental asthma. Collectively, our results reveal a CIS-modulated mechanism that clarifies the opposing actions of GM-CSF in MØ differentiation and uncovers the role of GM-CSF in controlling allergic inflammation.Shengbo Zhang ... Naiara G. Bediaga ... et al
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