An autonomous CEBPA enhancer specific for myeloid-lineage priming and neutrophilic differentiation.
Roberto AvellinoMarije HavermansClaudia ErpelinckMathijs A SandersRemco HoogenboezemHarmen J G van de WerkenElwin RomboutsKirsten van LomPaulina M H van StrienClaudia GebhardMichael RehliJohn PimandaDominik BeckStefan ErkelandThijs KuikenHans de LooperStefan GröschelIvo TouwEric BindelsRuud DelwelPublished in: Blood (2016)
Neutrophilic differentiation is dependent on CCAAT enhancer-binding protein α (C/EBPα), a transcription factor expressed in multiple organs including the bone marrow. Using functional genomic technologies in combination with clustered regularly-interspaced short palindromic repeat (CRISPR)/CRISPR-associated protein 9 genome editing and in vivo mouse modeling, we show that CEBPA is located in a 170-kb topological-associated domain that contains 14 potential enhancers. Of these, 1 enhancer located +42 kb from CEBPA is active and engages with the CEBPA promoter in myeloid cells only. Germ line deletion of the homologous enhancer in mice in vivo reduces Cebpa levels exclusively in hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) and myeloid-primed progenitor cells leading to severe defects in the granulocytic lineage, without affecting any other Cebpa-expressing organ studied. The enhancer-deleted progenitor cells lose their myeloid transcription program and are blocked in differentiation. Deletion of the enhancer also causes loss of HSC maintenance. We conclude that a single +42-kb enhancer is essential for CEBPA expression in myeloid cells only.
Keyphrases
- binding protein
- transcription factor
- bone marrow
- genome editing
- crispr cas
- stem cells
- dendritic cells
- acute myeloid leukemia
- induced apoptosis
- dna binding
- cell cycle arrest
- genome wide
- mesenchymal stem cells
- dna methylation
- signaling pathway
- gene expression
- climate change
- oxidative stress
- cell therapy
- adipose tissue
- metabolic syndrome
- cell death
- dna damage
- immune response
- copy number
- genome wide identification
- human health
- high fat diet induced