A miR-150/TET3 pathway regulates the generation of mouse and human non-classical monocyte subset.
Dorothée Selimoglu-BuetJulie RivièreHussein GhamlouchLaura BencheikhCatherine LacoutMargot MorabitoM'boyba Khadija DiopGuillaume MeuriceMarie BrecklerAurélie ChauveauCamille DebordFranck DebeurmeRaphael ItzyksonNicolas ChapuisChristophe WillekensOrianne Wagner-BallonOlivier A BernardNathalie M DroinEric SolaryPublished in: Nature communications (2018)
Non-classical monocyte subsets may derive from classical monocyte differentiation and the proportion of each subset is tightly controlled. Deregulation of this repartition is observed in diverse human diseases, including chronic myelomonocytic leukemia (CMML) in which non-classical monocyte numbers are significantly decreased relative to healthy controls. Here, we identify a down-regulation of hsa-miR-150 through methylation of a lineage-specific promoter in CMML monocytes. Mir150 knock-out mice demonstrate a cell-autonomous defect in non-classical monocytes. Our pulldown experiments point to Ten-Eleven-Translocation-3 (TET3) mRNA as a hsa-miR-150 target in classical human monocytes. We show that Tet3 knockout mice generate an increased number of non-classical monocytes. Our results identify the miR-150/TET3 axis as being involved in the generation of non-classical monocytes.