Publication | Closed Access
Regulation of the myeloperoxidase enhancer binding proteins Pu1, C-EBP alpha, -beta, and -delta during granulocyte-lineage specification.
139
Citations
41
References
1996
Year
Lymphocyte DevelopmentImmunologyC-ebp DeltaC-ebp AlphaCellular PhysiologyRedox BiologyProteins Pu1Myeloid NeoplasiaHematological MalignancyMultipotential CellsHematologyCell SignalingGranulocyteCell BiologyMyelopoiesisChromatin FunctionChromatinDevelopmental BiologyNatural SciencesMyeloperoxidase EnhancerMalignant Blood DisorderCellular BiochemistrySystems BiologyMedicineCell Development
We have compared the molecular architecture and function of the myeloperoxidase upstream enhancer in multipotential versus granulocyte-committed hematopoietic progenitor cells. We show that the enhancer is accessible in multipotential cell chromatin but functionally incompetent before granulocyte commitment. Multipotential cells contain both Pu1 and C-EBP alpha as enhancer-binding activities. Pu1 is unphosphorylated in both multipotential and granulocyte-committed cells but is phosphorylated in B lymphocytes, raising the possibility that differential phosphorylation may play a role in specifying its lymphoid versus myeloid functions. C-EBP alpha exists as multiple phosphorylated forms in the nucleus of both multipotential and granulocyte-committed cells. C-EBP beta is unphosphorylated and cytoplasmically localized in multipotential cells but exists as a phosphorylated nuclear enhancer-binding activity in granulocyte-committed cells. Granulocyte colony-stimulating factor-induced granulocytic differentiation of multipotential progenitor cells results in activation of C-EBP delta expression and functional recruitment of C-EBP delta and C-EBP beta to the nucleus. Our results implicate Pu1 and the C-EBP family as critical regulators of myeloperoxidase gene expression and are consistent with a model in which a temporal exchange of C-EBP isoforms at the myeloperoxidase enhancer mediates the transition from a primed state in multipotential cells to a transcriptionally active configuration in promyelocytes.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1