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Stage-specific action of Runx1 and GATA3 controls silencing of PU.1 expression in mouse pro-T cells.

Hiroyuki HosokawaMaria KoizumiKaori MasuharaMaile Romero-WolfTomoaki TanakaToshinori NakayamaEllen V Rothenberg
Published in: The Journal of experimental medicine (2021)
PU.1 (encoded by Spi1), an ETS-family transcription factor with many hematopoietic roles, is highly expressed in the earliest intrathymic T cell progenitors but must be down-regulated during T lineage commitment. The transcription factors Runx1 and GATA3 have been implicated in this Spi1 repression, but the basis of the timing was unknown. We show that increasing Runx1 and/or GATA3 down-regulates Spi1 expression in pro-T cells, while deletion of these factors after Spi1 down-regulation reactivates its expression. Leveraging the stage specificities of repression and transcription factor binding revealed an unconventional but functional site in Spi1 intron 2. Acute Cas9-mediated deletion or disruption of the Runx and GATA motifs in this element reactivates silenced Spi1 expression in a pro-T cell line, substantially more than disruption of other candidate elements, and counteracts the repression of Spi1 in primary pro-T cells during commitment. Thus, Runx1 and GATA3 work stage specifically through an intronic silencing element in mouse Spi1 to control strength and maintenance of Spi1 repression during T lineage commitment.
Keyphrases
  • transcription factor
  • dna binding
  • poor prognosis
  • genome wide identification
  • anti inflammatory
  • binding protein
  • single cell
  • bone marrow
  • intensive care unit
  • crispr cas
  • cell fate
  • extracorporeal membrane oxygenation