Analysis of a Transcriptional Network Involving PU.1, Notch, and Gata3 in the Lymphomyeloid Lineage Decision during Early T-cell Development

Hematopoiesis is a well-established system used to study developmental choices amongst cells with multiple lineage potentials, as well as the transcription factor network interactions that drive these developmental paths. Multipotent progenitors travel from the bone marrow to the thymus where T-cel...

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Main Author: Del Real , Marissa Morales
Format: Others
Published: 2013
Online Access:https://thesis.library.caltech.edu/7658/1/Thesis_MMDR_final.pdf
https://thesis.library.caltech.edu/7658/7/DelReal-Rothenberg_Tables-S2A-E.xlsx
https://thesis.library.caltech.edu/7658/8/DelReal-Rothenberg_Table%20S3.pdf
Del Real , Marissa Morales (2013) Analysis of a Transcriptional Network Involving PU.1, Notch, and Gata3 in the Lymphomyeloid Lineage Decision during Early T-cell Development. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/PEWS-KM18. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:05022013-181603910 <https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:05022013-181603910>
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spelling ndltd-CALTECH-oai-thesis.library.caltech.edu-76582019-10-05T03:02:24Z Analysis of a Transcriptional Network Involving PU.1, Notch, and Gata3 in the Lymphomyeloid Lineage Decision during Early T-cell Development Del Real , Marissa Morales Hematopoiesis is a well-established system used to study developmental choices amongst cells with multiple lineage potentials, as well as the transcription factor network interactions that drive these developmental paths. Multipotent progenitors travel from the bone marrow to the thymus where T-cell development is initiated and these early T-cell precursors retain lineage plasticity even after initiating a T-cell program. The development of these early cells is driven by Notch signaling and the combinatorial expression of many transcription factors, several of which are also involved in the development of other cell lineages. The ETS family transcription factor PU.1 is involved in the development of progenitor, myeloid, and lymphoid cells, and can divert progenitor T-cells from the T-lineage to a myeloid lineage. This diversion of early T-cells by PU.1 can be blocked by Notch signaling. The PU.1 and Notch interaction creates a switch wherein PU.1 in the presence of Notch promotes T-cell identity and PU.1 in the absence of Notch signaling promotes a myeloid identity. Here we characterized an early T-cell cell line, Scid.adh.2c2, as a good model system for studying the myeloid vs. lymphoid developmental choice dependent on PU.1 and Notch signaling. We then used the Scid.adh.2c2 system to identify mechanisms mediating PU.1 and Notch signaling interactions during early T-cell development. We show that the mechanism by which Notch signaling is protecting pro-T cells is neither degradation nor modification of the PU.1 protein. Instead we give evidence that Notch signaling is blocking the PU.1-driven inhibition of a key set of T-regulatory genes including Myb, Tcf7, and Gata3. We show that the protection of Gata3 from PU.1-mediated inhibition, by Notch signaling and Myb, is important for retaining a T-lineage identity. We also discuss a PU.1-driven mechanism involving E-protein inhibition that leads to the inhibition of Notch target genes. This is mechanism may be used as a lockdown mechanism in pro-T-cells that have made the decision to divert to the myeloid pathway. 2013 Thesis NonPeerReviewed application/pdf https://thesis.library.caltech.edu/7658/1/Thesis_MMDR_final.pdf application/vnd.ms-excel https://thesis.library.caltech.edu/7658/7/DelReal-Rothenberg_Tables-S2A-E.xlsx application/pdf https://thesis.library.caltech.edu/7658/8/DelReal-Rothenberg_Table%20S3.pdf https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:05022013-181603910 Del Real , Marissa Morales (2013) Analysis of a Transcriptional Network Involving PU.1, Notch, and Gata3 in the Lymphomyeloid Lineage Decision during Early T-cell Development. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/PEWS-KM18. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:05022013-181603910 <https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:05022013-181603910> https://thesis.library.caltech.edu/7658/
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description Hematopoiesis is a well-established system used to study developmental choices amongst cells with multiple lineage potentials, as well as the transcription factor network interactions that drive these developmental paths. Multipotent progenitors travel from the bone marrow to the thymus where T-cell development is initiated and these early T-cell precursors retain lineage plasticity even after initiating a T-cell program. The development of these early cells is driven by Notch signaling and the combinatorial expression of many transcription factors, several of which are also involved in the development of other cell lineages. The ETS family transcription factor PU.1 is involved in the development of progenitor, myeloid, and lymphoid cells, and can divert progenitor T-cells from the T-lineage to a myeloid lineage. This diversion of early T-cells by PU.1 can be blocked by Notch signaling. The PU.1 and Notch interaction creates a switch wherein PU.1 in the presence of Notch promotes T-cell identity and PU.1 in the absence of Notch signaling promotes a myeloid identity. Here we characterized an early T-cell cell line, Scid.adh.2c2, as a good model system for studying the myeloid vs. lymphoid developmental choice dependent on PU.1 and Notch signaling. We then used the Scid.adh.2c2 system to identify mechanisms mediating PU.1 and Notch signaling interactions during early T-cell development. We show that the mechanism by which Notch signaling is protecting pro-T cells is neither degradation nor modification of the PU.1 protein. Instead we give evidence that Notch signaling is blocking the PU.1-driven inhibition of a key set of T-regulatory genes including Myb, Tcf7, and Gata3. We show that the protection of Gata3 from PU.1-mediated inhibition, by Notch signaling and Myb, is important for retaining a T-lineage identity. We also discuss a PU.1-driven mechanism involving E-protein inhibition that leads to the inhibition of Notch target genes. This is mechanism may be used as a lockdown mechanism in pro-T-cells that have made the decision to divert to the myeloid pathway.
author Del Real , Marissa Morales
spellingShingle Del Real , Marissa Morales
Analysis of a Transcriptional Network Involving PU.1, Notch, and Gata3 in the Lymphomyeloid Lineage Decision during Early T-cell Development
author_facet Del Real , Marissa Morales
author_sort Del Real , Marissa Morales
title Analysis of a Transcriptional Network Involving PU.1, Notch, and Gata3 in the Lymphomyeloid Lineage Decision during Early T-cell Development
title_short Analysis of a Transcriptional Network Involving PU.1, Notch, and Gata3 in the Lymphomyeloid Lineage Decision during Early T-cell Development
title_full Analysis of a Transcriptional Network Involving PU.1, Notch, and Gata3 in the Lymphomyeloid Lineage Decision during Early T-cell Development
title_fullStr Analysis of a Transcriptional Network Involving PU.1, Notch, and Gata3 in the Lymphomyeloid Lineage Decision during Early T-cell Development
title_full_unstemmed Analysis of a Transcriptional Network Involving PU.1, Notch, and Gata3 in the Lymphomyeloid Lineage Decision during Early T-cell Development
title_sort analysis of a transcriptional network involving pu.1, notch, and gata3 in the lymphomyeloid lineage decision during early t-cell development
publishDate 2013
url https://thesis.library.caltech.edu/7658/1/Thesis_MMDR_final.pdf
https://thesis.library.caltech.edu/7658/7/DelReal-Rothenberg_Tables-S2A-E.xlsx
https://thesis.library.caltech.edu/7658/8/DelReal-Rothenberg_Table%20S3.pdf
Del Real , Marissa Morales (2013) Analysis of a Transcriptional Network Involving PU.1, Notch, and Gata3 in the Lymphomyeloid Lineage Decision during Early T-cell Development. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/PEWS-KM18. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:05022013-181603910 <https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:05022013-181603910>
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