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    Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2006 Aug 8;103(32):11993-8. Epub 2006 Jul 31.

    Notch/Delta signaling constrains reengineering of pro-T cells by PU.1.

    Source

    Division of Biology 156-29, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, CA 91125, USA.

    Erratum in

    • Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2006 Sep 19;103(38):14255.

    Abstract

    PU.1 is essential for early stages of mouse T cell development but antagonizes it if expressed constitutively. Two separable mechanisms are involved: attenuation and diversion. Dysregulated PU.1 expression inhibits pro-T cell survival, proliferation, and passage through beta-selection by blocking essential T cell transcription factors, signaling molecules, and Rag gene expression, which expression of a rearranged T cell antigen receptor transgene cannot rescue. However, Bcl2 transgenic cells are protected from this attenuation and may even undergo beta-selection, as shown by PU.1 transduction of defined subsets of Bcl2 transgenic fetal thymocytes with differentiation in OP9-DL1 and OP9 control cultures. The outcome of PU.1 expression in these cells depends on Notch/Delta signaling. PU.1 can efficiently divert thymocytes toward a myeloid-like state with multigene regulatory changes, but Notch/Delta signaling vetoes diversion. Gene expression analysis distinguishes sets of critical T lineage regulatory genes with different combinatorial responses to PU.1 and Notch/Delta signals, suggesting particular importance for inhibition of E proteins, Myb, and/or Gfi1 (growth factor independence 1) in diversion. However, Notch signaling only protects against diversion of cells that have undergone T lineage specification after Thy-1 and CD25 up-regulation. The results imply that in T cell precursors, Notch/Delta signaling normally acts to modulate and channel PU.1 transcriptional activities during the stages from T lineage specification until commitment.

    PMID:
    16880393
    [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
    PMCID:
    PMC1567686
    Free PMC Article

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