Abstract

AbstractAbstract 839Hematopoietic progenitors undergo differentiation while navigating several cell division cycles, but it is unknown whether these two processes are functionally coupled. We addressed this question by studying erythropoiesis in mouse fetal liver in vivo. We used flow cytometry and the cell surface markers CD71 and Ter119 to subdivide freshly isolated fetal liver cells into a developmental sequence of six subsets, from the least mature, Subset 0 (S0), to the most mature, Subset 5 (S5). We found that the upregulation of cell surface CD71, which marks the transition from S0 (CD71lowTer119negative) to S1 (CD71highTer119negative), identifies a key S-phase dependent step in erythropoiesis, that precedes, and is essential for, expression of erythroid-specific genes (Figure 1).Specifically, we found that erythroid progenitors at the transition from S0 to S1 are tightly synchronized in S-phase of the last generation of erythroid colony-forming cells (CFU-e). DNA replication within this, but not subsequent cycles, was required for a number of simultaneous committal transitions whose precise timing was previously unknown. These include the onset of erythropoietin dependence, activation of the erythroid master transcriptional regulator GATA-1, and a switch to an active chromatin conformation at the b-globin locus control region (LCR). The S-phase dependent chromatin switch at the b-globin LCR was characterized by the formation of DNase I hypersensitivity sites, by a change in the timing of replication of the b-globin locus, by altered covalent modifications of histone tails, and by the rapid onset of DNA demethylation. An arrest of S-phase progression during the transition from S0 to S1 arrested the formation of DNase I hypersensitivity sites and prevented DNA demethylation. It also halted the subsequent transcription of b-globin and other erythroid genes. By contrast, an arrest of S-phase progression in cells that had already traversed the S0/S1 transition, no longer interfered with the erythroid transcriptional program.Mechanistically, we found that S-phase progression during this key committal step was dependent on downregulation of the cyclin-dependent kinase p57KIP2, and in turn caused the downregulation of PU.1, an antagonist of GATA-1 function. These findings therefore highlight a novel regulatory role for a cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor early in erythroid maturation, distinct to their known function in cell cycle exit at the end of terminal differentiation. Furthermore, we identified a novel, mutual inhibition between PU.1 expression and S-phase progression, that provides a “synchromesh” mechanism, “locking” the erythroid differentiation program to the cell cycle clock and ensuring precise coordination of critical differentiation events. [Display omitted] Disclosures:No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.

Highlights

  • Hematopoietic progenitors execute a cell division program in parallel with a differentiation program in which lineage choice is followed by lineage-specific gene expression

  • The S0 to S1 Transition Is Marked by Downregulation of PU.1 and GATA-2 and Precedes Induction of Erythroid-Specific Genes To investigate the link between S-phase and the erythroid differentiation program, we examined expression of erythroid transcriptional regulators and erythroid-specific genes in freshly sorted fetal liver subsets and in fetal brain (Figure 3A)

  • We have identified a committal step in erythropoiesis in which the cell cycle clock is precisely synchronized with and coordinates an erythroid differentiation switch

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Summary

Introduction

Hematopoietic progenitors execute a cell division program in parallel with a differentiation program in which lineage choice is followed by lineage-specific gene expression. Cell cycle exit, driven by cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitors (CDKI), is a prerequisite for terminal differentiation, establishing a key interaction between the cell cycle and differentiation programs [1,2,3]. It is unclear how the cell cycle and differentiation programs might be linked prior to cell cycle exit. Such links are presumably required to ensure the correct number of differentiated progeny. An intriguing possibility is that the clockwork-like mechanisms regulating orderly cell cycle transitions may be used, in the context of differentiating cells, to coordinate key steps in differentiation

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