Publication | Closed Access
LIF‐mediated control of embryonic stem cell self‐renewal emerges due to an autoregulatory loop
71
Citations
41
References
2007
Year
Transcriptional RegulationDevelopmental BiologySignal TransductionCell RegulationAutoregulatory LoopMedicineMorphogenesisStem Cell ResearchEmbryonic Stem CellsCell Fate DeterminationStem Cell BiologyStem CellsCell BiologyCell SignalingCell DevelopmentEmbryonic Stem CellPositive Feedback LoopHealth Sciences
Stem cells convert graded stimuli into all-or-nothing cell-fate responses. We investigated how embryonic stem cells (ESCs) convert leukemia inhibitory factor (LIF) concentration into an all-or-nothing cell-fate decision (self-renewal). Using a combined experimental/computational approach we demonstrate unexpected switch-like (on/off) signaling in response to LIF. This behavior emerges over time due to a positive feedback loop controlling transcriptional expression of LIF signaling pathway components. The autoregulatory loop maintains robust pathway responsiveness ("on") at sufficient concentrations of exogenous LIF, while autocrine signaling and low concentrations of exogenous LIF cause ESCs to adopt the weakly responsive ("off") state of differentiated cells. We demonstrate that loss of ligand responsiveness is reversible and precedes loss of the ESC transcription factors Oct4 and Nanog, suggesting an early step in the hierarchical control of differentiation. While endogenously produced ligands were insufficient to sustain the "on" state, they buffer it, influencing the timing of differentiation. These results demonstrate a novel switch-like behavior, which establishes the LIF threshold for ESC self-renewal.
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