Regulation of early T-lineage gene expression and developmental progression by the progenitor cell transcription factor PU.1

Author:

Champhekar Ameya,Damle Sagar S.,Freedman George,Carotta Sebastian,Nutt Stephen L.ORCID,Rothenberg Ellen V.ORCID

Abstract

The ETS family transcription factor PU.1 is essential for the development of several blood lineages, including T cells, but its function in intrathymic T-cell precursors has been poorly defined. In the thymus, high PU.1 expression persists through multiple cell divisions in early stages but then falls sharply during T-cell lineage commitment. PU.1 silencing is critical for T-cell commitment, but it has remained unknown how PU.1 activities could contribute positively to T-cell development. Here we employed conditional knockout and modified antagonist PU.1 constructs to perturb PU.1 function stage-specifically in early T cells. We show that PU.1 is needed for full proliferation, restricting access to some non-T fates, and controlling the timing of T-cell developmental progression such that removal or antagonism of endogenous PU.1 allows precocious access to T-cell differentiation. Dominant-negative effects reveal that this repression by PU.1 is mediated indirectly. Genome-wide transcriptome analysis identifies novel targets of PU.1 positive and negative regulation affecting progenitor cell signaling and cell biology and indicating distinct regulatory effects on different subsets of progenitor cell transcription factors. Thus, in addition to supporting early T-cell proliferation, PU.1 regulates the timing of activation of the core T-lineage developmental program.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Louis A. Garfinkle Memorial Laboratory Fund

Al Sherman Foundation

Albert Billings Ruddock Professorship

Victorian State Government Operational Infrastructure Support

National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia Independent Research Institute Infrastructure Support

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

Subject

Developmental Biology,Genetics

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