Zeitschriftenaufsatz
|
2015
Epigenetic program and transcription factor circuitry of dendritic cell development
Autor:in
Lin, Qiong; Chauvistre, H.; Costa, Ivan; Gusmao, Eduardo; Mitzka, S.; Haenzelmann, Sonja; Baying, B.; Klisch, Theresa; Moriggl, Richard; Hennuy, B.; Smeets, Hubert J.; Hoffmann, Kurt; Benes, Vladimir; Sere, K.; Zenke, Martin
Journal
Abstrakt
Dendritic cells (DC) are professional antigen presenting cells that develop from hematopoietic stem cells through successive steps of lineage commitment and differentiation. Multipotent progenitors (MPP) are committed to DC restricted common DC progenitors (CDP), which differentiate into specific DC subsets, classical DC (cDC) and plasmacytoid DC (pDC). To determine epigenetic states and regulatory circuitries during DC differentiation, we measured consecutive changes of genome-wide gene expression, histone modification and transcription factor occupancy during the sequel MPP-CDP-cDC/pDC. Specific histone marks in CDP reveal a DC-primed epigenetic signature, which is maintained and reinforced during DC differentiation. Epigenetic marks and transcription factor PU.1 occupancy increasingly coincide upon DC differentiation. By integrating PU.1 occupancy and gene expression we devised a transcription factor regulatory circuitry for DC commitment and subset specification. The circuitry provides the transcription factor hierarchy that drives the sequel MPP-CDP-cDC/pDC, including Irf4, Irf8, Tcf4, Spib and Stat factors. The circuitry also includes feedback loops inferred for individual or multiple factors, which stabilize distinct stages of DC development and DC subsets. In summary, here we describe the basic regulatory circuitry of transcription factors that drives DC development.
Schlagwörter
HEMATOPOIETIC STEM-CELLS; STEADY-STATE; FACTOR PU.1; FACTOR E2-2; MYELOID DIFFERENTIATION; HISTONE MODIFICATIONS; CHROMATIN STATES; PROGENITOR CELLS; GENE-EXPRESSION; ID2 EXPRESSION
Dokumententyp
Originalarbeit
CC Lizenz
CCBY
Open Access Type
Gold
ISSN/eISSN
0305-1048 - 1362-4962
WoS ID
PubMed ID