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IκBα controls dormancy in hematopoietic stem cells via retinoic acid during embryonic development.

Roshana ThambyrajahMaria MaquedaMuhammad Zaki Hidayatullah FadlullahMartin ProffittWen Hao NeoYolanda GuillénMarta Casado-PelaezPatricia Herrero-MolineroCarla BrujasNoemi CastelluccioJessica GonzálezArnau IglesiasLaura MarruecosCristina Ruiz-HerguidoManel EstellerElisabetta MereuGeorges LacaudLluís EspinosaAnna Bigas
Published in: Nature communications (2024)
Recent findings suggest that Hematopoietic Stem Cells (HSC) and progenitors arise simultaneously and independently of each other already in the embryonic aorta-gonad mesonephros region, but it is still unknown how their different features are established. Here, we uncover IκBα (Nfkbia, the inhibitor of NF-κB) as a critical regulator of HSC proliferation throughout development. IκBα balances retinoic acid signaling levels together with the epigenetic silencer, PRC2, specifically in HSCs. Loss of IκBα decreases proliferation of HSC and induces a dormancy related gene expression signature instead. Also, IκBα deficient HSCs respond with superior activation to in vitro culture and in serial transplantation. At the molecular level, chromatin regions harboring binding motifs for retinoic acid signaling are hypo-methylated for the PRC2 dependent H3K27me3 mark in IκBα deficient HSCs. Overall, we show that the proliferation index in the developing HSCs is regulated by a IκBα-PRC2 axis, which controls retinoic acid signaling.
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