scholarly journals Committed Hemopoietic Progenitors, Not Stem Cells, are the Principal Responders to Hox Gene Transduction

2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Harvey Lim ◽  
Salima Janmohamed ◽  
Patricia Benveniste ◽  
Robert Herrington ◽  
Mary Barbara ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTAs hemopoietic stem cells differentiate, their proliferative lifespan shortens by unknown mechanisms. Homeobox cluster (Hox) genes have been implicated by their enhancement of self-renewal when transduced into hemopoietic cells, but gene deletions have been inconclusive because of functional redundancy. Here we enforced HOXB4 expression in purified precursor stages, and compared responses of early stages expressing the endogenous genes with later stages that did not. Contrary to the prevalent view that transduced Hox genes enhance the self-renewal of hemopoietic stem cells, stem cells or their multipotent progeny expressing the endogenous genes showed little response. Instead, immortalization, extensive self-renewal and acquired reconstituting potential occurred in committed erythroid and myeloid progenitors where the endogenous genes were shutting down. The results change our understanding of the stages affected by exogenous HOX proteins and point to shutdown of the endogenous genes as a principal determinant of the shortened clonal lifespans of committed progenitor cells.

2005 ◽  
Vol 174 (2) ◽  
pp. 752-757 ◽  
Author(s):  
Liping Yang ◽  
Ingunn Dybedal ◽  
David Bryder ◽  
Lars Nilsson ◽  
Ewa Sitnicka ◽  
...  

1968 ◽  
Vol 72 (3) ◽  
pp. 221-228 ◽  
Author(s):  
Helmut Vogel ◽  
Helgard Niewisch ◽  
Gastone Matioli

Development ◽  
1999 ◽  
Vol 126 (15) ◽  
pp. 3303-3312 ◽  
Author(s):  
Q. Ch'ng ◽  
C. Kenyon

Hox genes pattern the fates of the ventral ectodermal Pn.p cells that lie along the anteroposterior (A/P) body axis of C. elegans. In these cells, the Hox genes are expressed in sequential overlapping domains where they control the ability of each Pn.p cell to fuse with the surrounding syncytial epidermis. The activities of Hox proteins are sex-specific in this tissue, resulting in sex-specific patterns of cell fusion: in hermaphrodites, the mid-body cells remain unfused, whereas in males, alternating domains of syncytial and unfused cells develop. We have found that the gene egl-27, which encodes a C. elegans homologue of a chromatin regulatory factor, specifies these patterns by regulating both Hox gene expression and Hox protein function. In egl-27 mutants, the expression domains of Hox genes in these cells are shifted posteriorly, suggesting that egl-27 influences A/P positional information. In addition, egl-27 controls Hox protein function in the Pn.p cells in two ways: in hermaphrodites it inhibits MAB-5 activity, whereas in males it permits a combinatorial interaction between LIN-39 and MAB-5. Thus, by selectively modifying the activities of Hox proteins, egl-27 elaborates a simple Hox expression pattern into complex patterns of cell fates. Taken together, these results implicate egl-27 in the diversification of cell fates along the A/P axis and suggest that chromatin reorganization is necessary for controlling Hox gene expression and Hox protein function.


Blood ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 110 (11) ◽  
pp. 1562-1562
Author(s):  
Irina Velichutina ◽  
Ari Melnick

Abstract Coordinated regulation of Hox gene expression during hematopoiesis is epigenetically controlled via chromatin modification by Polycomb group (PcG) and Trithorax (MLL) protein complexes. Whereas the oncogenic potential of certain HOX genes in leukemia has already been defined, little is known about their role in Diffuse Large B-cell Lymphomas (DLBCL). The primary focus of our studies is to determine the contribution of PcG-mediated repression of HOX and other genes to DLBCL pathogenesis. The PcG protein, Ezh2, is vital for maintaining both pluripotency of stem cells and identity of differentiated cells. Ezh2 tri-methylates lysine K27 of histone 3 (H3K27me3), a histone modification associated with gene silencing. Importantly, Ezh2 is frequently overexpressed in DLBCLs suggesting a role for EZH2 in lymphomagenesis. In support to this notion we discovered that Ezh2 is essential for DLBCL cell survival. By depleting Ezh2 level using RNAi, we found that loss of Ezh2 triggers cell cycle arrest and death of DLBCL cells. This finding prompted us to initiate functional studies aimed at uncovering Ezh2 target genes that mediate the observed cellular response in DLBCL cells. We first focused on a potential role of Ezh2 in regulation of HOX genes. We compared and contrasted Ezh2 targets in both normal Germinal Center (GC) B-cells and GC-derived DLBCLs to determine the normal and pathologic function of EZH2. We employed a tiling ChIP-chip approach covering the four human HOX clusters and mapped Ezh2 and H3K27m3 within HOX gene clusters. We further verified gene expression status of a subset of Hox genes by QPCR. These data indicated that Ezh2 and its cognate H3K27m3 mark are present at promoters of HoxC genes in both mature GC B-cells and GC-derived lymphoma cells, thereby driving the HoxC locus silent, suggesting that both rapidly dividing GC cells and GC-derived lymphoma cells require epigenetic silencing of this locus in order to maintain their phenotype. Both Ezh2 and the corresponding H3K27m3 transcription repression mark are absent within the promoter region of HoxA9 gene. HoxA9 promotes stem cell self-renewal and it is aberrantly activated in AML cells. This observation is especially striking as the HoxA9 is embedded into the Ezh2-sealed region in DLBCL cells, suggesting an Ezh2-independent mode of regulation. We are in the process of testing functional significance of this finding for lymphoma pathogenesis. we found that HoxB genes that are differentially expressed in progenitor vs. lineage committed cells are silent in DLBCL cells according to H3K27m3/Ezh2 pattern and gene expression analysis. Intriguingly, the early progenitor specific gene, HoxB3, is uniquely not bound by EZH2 nor H3K27 methylated and was highly expressed in lymphoma cells. This finding underscores a potential functional significance of re-expression of genes that control cell self-renewal in malignances that derive from mature B cells. We also examined transcriptional programming by EZH2 at the genomic level by ChIP-on-chip using NimbleGen 24,000 promoter arrays. EZH2 was bound to ∼1700 promoters in DLBCL cells and a similar number of genes displayed H3K27 methylation. Gain and loss of function studies are underway to identify the contribution of the most likely EZH2 direct targets genes to the DLBCL survival including both HOX genes and other genomic direct target genes. Taken together, our data suggest a critical role for EZH2 mediated epigenetic silencing of HOX and other genes in DLBCL - and implicate aberrant HOX gene expression in DLBCL pathogenesis.


Blood ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 122 (21) ◽  
pp. 2496-2496 ◽  
Author(s):  
David H Spencer ◽  
Margaret A. Young ◽  
Jeffery M. Klco ◽  
Timothy J. Ley

Abstract HOX genes encode a family of homeodomain transcription factors with important roles in hematopoiesis. Expression of HOX genes is also a common feature of acute myeloid leukemia (AML), and functional studies have suggested that HOX-dependent pathways may contribute to leukemogenesis. Although HOX expression is known to correlate with specific AML mutations, the patterns of expression of all 39 HOX genes in primary AML samples, and their relationships with recurrent AML mutations, are incompletely understood. In addition, little is known about the influence of AML mutations on DNA methylation at the HOX loci, and the relationship between HOX gene expression and methylation in AML. In this study, we carried out a combined analysis of gene expression data from microarray and RNA-sequencing platforms and genome-wide DNA array-based methylation from 189 primary AML samples that have been previously characterized by either whole-genome or whole exome sequencing. We also measured expression and methylation using the same platforms from normal bone marrow subsets, including CD34+ cells, promyelocytes, monocytes, neutrophils and lymphocytes, and obtained expression data from CD34+ hematopoietic precursors generated from in vitro differentiation of human embryonic stem cells. Our analysis confirmed previous work on the general patterns of HOX expression in AML. The HOXA and HOXB genes showed variation both within each cluster and across the AMLs, although high level expression was restricted to a subset of these genes, including HOXA3, HOXA5, HOXA7, HOXA9, HOXA10, HOXB2-HOXB4, and HOXB6, as well as HOX cofactor MEIS1; HOXC and HOXD genes were minimally expressed in all of the samples. These observations were orthogonally validated by RNA-seq, and with a targeted Nanostring expression platform. Consistent with previous studies, MLL-positive AML samples (n=11) expressed only HOXA genes and MEIS1. AML samples with CBFB-MYH11 rearrangements (n=12) showed expression of only MEIS1, and HOXB2-HOXB4 at moderate levels; RUNX1-RUNX1T1 (n=7) and PML-RARA (n=19) samples did not detectably express any HOX genes. In AMLs with a normal karyotype (n=85), we observed two distinct patterns; one pattern displayed little or no HOX gene expression (7/85; 8%), and another displayed canonical expression of a specific subset of the HOXA and HOXB genes and MEIS1 (78/85; 92%) with similar relative HOX gene expression levels in all cases. Comparison of this pattern with normal bone marrow revealed the same HOX expression pattern in normal CD34+ cells; additional analysis showed that this pattern was confined to hematopoietic stem/progenitor cells, but was not seen in more mature cells, including other CD34+ subsets, promyelocytes, monocytes and neutrophils. We also measured HOX gene expression in CD34+ hematopoietic precursors generated from in vitro differentiation of human embryonic stem cells, which revealed expression of only MEIS1 and the canonical HOXB genes, suggesting that activation of these genes may represent the earliest events in the HOX pathway of hematopoietic development. Correlation of HOX expression with recurrent AML mutations by gene set enrichment analysis demonstrated a significant association with NPM1 (P<10-4) and DNMT3A (P<10-2) mutations, but not with other recurrent somatic mutations, including FLT3,IDH1/IDH2, and TET2. Methylation at the HOX loci demonstrated patterns that correlated with HOX expression, including hypomethylation at HOX promoters in samples with high expression. However, additional mutation-specific patterns were apparent. For example, NPM1-mutant AMLs demonstrated a distinct methylation pattern that included hypomethylation at the HOXB3 promoter, which was not shared with CBFB-MYH11 cases or other AMLs with HOXB3 expression. In summary, our comprehensive analysis demonstrates canonical expression and methylation patterns at the HOX loci in AML. These patterns correspond to specific recurrent AML mutations, and the dominant pattern in most normal karyotype AMLs mimics the signature of hematopoietic stem cells. This supports previous observations of developmental regulation of HOX genes in hematopoiesis, and implies that this normal stem cell signature is “captured” in the majority of AMLs with normal karyotype. In addition, distinct methylation patterns at HOX loci suggest that multiple regulatory mechanisms are involved in HOX expression in AML. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Cancers ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 11 (4) ◽  
pp. 512 ◽  
Author(s):  
Smith ◽  
Zyoud ◽  
Allegrucci

Stem cells are undifferentiated cells that have the unique ability to self-renew and differentiate into many different cell types. Their function is controlled by core gene networks whose misregulation can result in aberrant stem cell function and defects of regeneration or neoplasia. HOX genes are master regulators of cell identity and cell fate during embryonic development. They play a crucial role in embryonic stem cell differentiation into specific lineages and their expression is maintained in adult stem cells along differentiation hierarchies. Aberrant HOX gene expression is found in several cancers where they can function as either oncogenes by sustaining cell proliferation or tumor-suppressor genes by controlling cell differentiation. Emerging evidence shows that abnormal expression of HOX genes is involved in the transformation of adult stem cells into cancer stem cells. Cancer stem cells have been identified in most malignancies and proved to be responsible for cancer initiation, recurrence, and metastasis. In this review, we consider the role of HOX genes in normal and cancer stem cells and discuss how the modulation of HOX gene function could lead to the development of novel therapeutic strategies that target cancer stem cells to halt tumor initiation, progression, and resistance to treatment.


Blood ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 128 (22) ◽  
pp. 444-444 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xiaorong Gu ◽  
Reda Z. Mahfouz ◽  
Quteba Ebrahem ◽  
Francis Enane ◽  
Tomas Radivoyevitch ◽  
...  

Abstract Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is self-renewal by immature myeloid precursors that fail to differentiate. An influential 'leukemia stem cell' model thus proposes that leukemogenic proteins augment or introduce a stem cell-like self-renewal program into cells, e.g., by upregulating signaling or transcription factors (TF) emblematic of stem cells (e.g., HOX). We investigated how the most recurrently mutated protein in AML, mutant nucleophosmin (mNPM1), causes leukemic cell expansion. The results challenge this model, but most importantly, open the door to rational targeted therapy for mNPM1 AML. One way of examining for stem cell programs in AML cells is to look at expression patterns of master TF that regulate expression of hundreds of genes and dictate cell fates. Of these select TF, the master TF that create hematopoietic stem cells (HLF etc.) are minimally or not expressed. Instead, there are very high levels of the master TF that drive monocyte and granulocyte lineage fates, PU.1 (SPI1) and CEBPA. Clearly, however, the lineage-programs intended by PU.1/CEBPA are inefficiently executed if at all - mNPM1 AML patient bone marrows had 85-97% cells with a granulocyte-monocyte progenitor phenotype, accumulated at the expense of downstream mature cells (Quek et al, JEM 2016). This aggregation at a lineage-committed, intermediate, naturally proliferative level of the hematopoietic hierarchy suggests an alternative model - instead of introducing a poorly-defined stem cell self-renewal program, mutant proteins disable differentiation programs which usually quench MYC-driven proliferation intrinsic to lineage-progenitors. To better understand how mNPM1 interacts with cellular machinery, we used mass-spectrometry to comprehensively document the protein interactions of endogenous NPM1 in AML cell nuclear and cytoplasmic fractions, the first analysis of this kind. Notably, the NPM1 protein interactome was enriched for PU.1. Critically, wild-type (wt) NPM1/PU.1 was in the nucleus of wtNPM1 AML cells, but mNPM1/PU.1 was in the cytoplasm of mNPM1 AML cells. This was evident clearly also by Western blot of cell fractions and by IF microscopy of primary AML cells and cell lines. Is cytoplasmic dis-location of PU.1 sufficient to explain persistent hematopoietic precursor proliferation? We used murine Pu.1 knock-out hematopoietic precursors transduced to express Pu.1 fused with the estrogen receptor (Pu.1-ER) to answer this question - Pu.1 relocation from the cytoplasm to the nucleus by tamoxifen triggered monocytic differentiation that terminated proliferation. Moreover, Pu.1-ER cells, like mNPM1 AML cells, highly express Hox genes, rapidly suppressed upon Pu.1 relocation to the nucleus. Thus, Pu.1 dominantly controls Hox and proliferation, as befitting of a master TF, and persistent HOX expression, like persistent progenitor proliferation, can be caused by Pu.1 loss-of-function. Protein macromolecules like NPM1 require transport factors to exit (exportins) the nucleus. A specific exportin, XPO1, was the major exportin found in the NPM1 interactome. XPO1 interactions with transported cargo can be inhibited by the small molecule drug KPT330. KPT330 10-20 nM rapidly re-located mNPM1 and PU.1 to the nucleus, downregulated MYC, upregulated p27/CDKN1B, upregulated monocyte but not granulocyte differentiation markers, induced morphologic changes of monocyte differentiation, and terminated proliferation of mNPM1 AML cells. The same low nanomolar treatment did not induce differentiation of wtNPM1 AML cells (THP1). Moreover, these KPT330 levels are not toxic to normal hematopoiesis (also shown by others). Thus, rather than gain-of-function of elusive stem cell-like self-renewal, the most frequently mutated protein in AML creates self-renewal by disabling a differentiation program that quenches intrinsic MYC-driven proliferation of lineage-progenitors. These observations are a mechanistic rationale to select refractory/relapsed mNPM1 AML patients for treatment with low well-tolerated doses of KPT330, with a defined molecular pharmacodynamic objective of returning PU.1 to the nucleus, to produce cell cycle exits by differentiation rather than p53-mediated apoptosis (to address chemotherapy resistance), to spare precious normal HSC (good therapeutic index), and directly reverse the basis for leukemic self-renewal (proliferation without differentiation). Figure. Figure. Disclosures Landesman: Karyopharm Therapeutics Inc: Employment, Other: stockholder. Saunthararajah:EpiDestiny: Consultancy, Other: patents around decitabine and tetrahydrouridine.


Blood ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 114 (22) ◽  
pp. 385-385 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yingzi Wang ◽  
Andrei V. Krivtsov ◽  
Amit U. Sinha ◽  
Trista North ◽  
Wolfram Goessling ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 385 Leukemia stem cells (LSC) possess extensive proliferative and self-renewal potential similar to normal hematopoietic stem cells (HSC). Therefore understanding the similarities and differences between HSC and LSC is critical if LSC specific therapies are to be developed. Hox genes represent a group of genes that can influence both normal HSC and LSC self-renewal, and are critical targets of leukemogenic MLL fusion proteins. Previous reports have described the ability of Hoxa9 and Meis1a (HoxA9/M) to induce leukemia when expressed in mouse bone marrow (BM). However, whether HoxA9/M can fully recapitulate the leukemogenic activity of MLL fusion proteins remains unclear. In this study, we show that HoxA9/M, unlike MLL-AF9, fails to induce leukemia from granulocyte-macrophage progenitors (GMP) but does so from HSC. Immunophenotypic analysis and in vivo limiting dilution transplantation of HSC-derived leukemias demonstrate heterogeneity with only a subset of cells possessing leukemia-propagating activity. The LSC in this model have an immunophenotype consistent with differentiating myeloid cells. Gene expression analysis of LSC induced by MLL-AF9 expression in GMP and HoxA9/M expression in HSC demonstrate an approximately 10-fold increase in prostaglandin-endoperoxide synthase 1 (PTGS1) (also known as Cycloxygenase-1 or Cox-1) and prostaglandin E receptor 1 (PTGER1) expression. As recent studies have highlighted a critical connection between prostaglandin synthesis and Wnt/ β-catenin signaling pathway, we hypothesized that β-catenin is aberrantly activated in LSC derived from either GMP expressing MLL-AF9 or HSC expressing HoxA9/M. Western blots and immunofluorescence using an antibody specific for dephosphorylated (activated) β-catenin identified active β-catenin in MLL-AF9-driven and HoxA9/M-driven LSC but not normal GMP. These data suggested that insufficient β-catenin activity might be a contributing factor to the inability of HoxA9/M to transform GMP and thus we sought to determine if activated β-catenin cooperated to induce leukemia from GMP. We found that co-expression of HoxA9/M and activated β-catenin efficiently induced leukemia from GMP whereas neither expressed alone had leukemogenic activity. Next, we assessed if β-catenin is required for HoxA9/M-mediated leukemogenesis initiated from HSC. Conditional β-catenin loss-of-function experiments demonstrated impaired in vivo expansion of cells derived from HoxA9/M transduced HSC, and β-cat-/- cells did not induce leukemia. This defect could be rescued by expression of a constitutively active form of β-catenin. Finally, we demonstrate that continued β-catenin activity is required for LSC maintenance by chemical suppression of the β-catenin pathway with indomethacin (a cox-1/cox-2 inhibitor), which shows remarkable selective elimination of the LSC fraction in mice transplanted with HoxA9/M transduced HSC. Our gain and loss-of-function studies demonstrate that β-catenin activity is required for leukemia initiation from HSC, and that constitutively active β-catenin can cooperate with HoxA9/M to efficiently transform GMP. Thus, Wnt/β-catenin activity makes cells permissive to transformation, which suggests that its restricted activation to stem cell populations in normal hematopoietic development limits the permissiveness of developmental cell types to transformation by specific oncogenes. These data have important implications for tumor development in other tissues/organs and for the development of β-catenin pathway antagonists in AML. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Blood ◽  
1984 ◽  
Vol 64 (2) ◽  
pp. 393-399 ◽  
Author(s):  
J Suda ◽  
T Suda ◽  
M Ogawa

Abstract Blast cell colonies seen in cultures of spleen cells from 5- fluorouracil-treated mice provide a highly enriched population of primitive hemopoietic progenitors. Our recent studies of the differentiation potentials of the paired daughter cells of these progenitors showed different patterns of differentiation in the colonies produced by the separated daughter cells. In this study, we carried out sequential micromanipulation of paired progenitors followed by cytologic examinations of the colonies derived from these progenitors. Of the total 94 evaluable cultures, consisting of three or more colonies, 52 consisted of macrophage colonies and one consisted of megakaryocyte colonies. In the remaining 41 cultures, diverse combinations of colonies revealing heterogeneous compositions of cell lineages were identified. Presumptive genealogic trees of the differentiation of hemopoietic progenitors constructed for the latter group of cultures suggested that monopotent progenitors may be derived from pluripotent progenitors in two ways: (1) directly during one cell division of pluripotent cells or (2) as a result of progressive lineage restriction during successive division of the pluripotent progenitors. The results also suggested that some of the oligopotent progenitors are capable of limited self-renewal.


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