PLZF is a regulator of homeostatic and cytokine-induced myeloid development

  1. Sergei Doulatov1,2,
  2. Faiyaz Notta1,2,5,
  3. Kim L. Rice3,5,
  4. Louise Howell4,
  5. Arthur Zelent4,
  6. Jonathan D. Licht3 and
  7. John E. Dick1,2,6
  1. 1Division of Cell and Molecular Biology, University Health Network, Toronto, Ontario M5G 1L7, Canada;
  2. 2Department of Molecular Genetics, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario M5G 1L7, Canada;
  3. 3Division of Hematology/Oncology, Robert H. Lurie Comprehensive Cancer Center, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, Illinois 60611, USA;
  4. 4Section of Haemato-Oncology, Institute of Cancer Research, Belmont, Sutton, Surrey SM2 5NG, United Kingdom
    1. 5 These authors contributed equally to this work.

    Abstract

    A major question in hematopoiesis is how the system maintains long-term homeostasis whereby the generation of large numbers of differentiated cells is balanced with the requirement for maintenance of progenitor pools, while remaining sufficiently flexible to respond to periods of perturbed cellular output during infection or stress. We focused on the development of the myeloid lineage and present evidence that promyelocytic leukemia zinc finger (PLZF) provides a novel function that is critical for both normal and stress-induced myelopoiesis. During homeostasis, PLZF restricts proliferation and differentiation of human cord blood-derived myeloid progenitors to maintain a balance between the progenitor and mature cell compartments. Analysis of PLZF promoter-binding sites revealed that it represses transcription factors involved in normal myeloid differentiation, including GFI-1, C/EBPα, and LEF-1, and induces negative regulators DUSP6 and ID2. Loss of ID2 relieves PLZF-mediated repression of differentiation identifying it as a functional target of PLZF in myelopoiesis. Furthermore, induction of ERK1/2 by myeloid cytokines, reflective of a stress response, leads to nuclear export and inactivation of PLZF, which augments mature cell production. Thus, negative regulators of differentiation can serve to maintain developmental systems in a primed state, so that their inactivation by extrinsic signals can induce proliferation and differentiation to rapidly satisfy increased demand for mature cells.

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