Role of the pioneer transcription factor GATA2 in health and disease.
Amena AktarBryan HeitPublished in: Journal of molecular medicine (Berlin, Germany) (2023)
The transcription factor GATA2 is involved in human diseases ranging from hematopoietic disorders, to cancer, to infectious diseases. GATA2 is one of six GATA-family transcription factors that act as pioneering transcription factors which facilitate the opening of heterochromatin and the subsequent binding of other transcription factors to induce gene expression from previously inaccessible regions of the genome. Although GATA2 is essential for hematopoiesis and lymphangiogenesis, it is also expressed in other tissues such as the lung, prostate gland, gastrointestinal tract, central nervous system, placenta, fetal liver, and fetal heart. Gene or transcriptional abnormalities of GATA2 causes or predisposes patients to several diseases including the hematological cancers acute myeloid leukemia and acute lymphoblastic leukemia, the primary immunodeficiency MonoMAC syndrome, and to cancers of the lung, prostate, uterus, kidney, breast, gastric tract, and ovaries. Recent data has also linked GATA2 expression and mutations to responses to infectious diseases including SARS-CoV-2 and Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia, and to inflammatory disorders such as atherosclerosis. In this article we review the role of GATA2 in the etiology and progression of these various diseases.
Keyphrases
- transcription factor
- infectious diseases
- dna binding
- gene expression
- genome wide identification
- sars cov
- acute lymphoblastic leukemia
- prostate cancer
- acute myeloid leukemia
- dna methylation
- end stage renal disease
- cardiovascular disease
- healthcare
- genome wide
- chronic kidney disease
- public health
- bone marrow
- mental health
- newly diagnosed
- ejection fraction
- prognostic factors
- risk assessment
- benign prostatic hyperplasia
- case report
- social media
- coronavirus disease
- artificial intelligence
- respiratory failure
- squamous cell