Literature DB >> 19171877

Expression of the leukemia oncogene Lmo2 is controlled by an array of tissue-specific elements dispersed over 100 kb and bound by Tal1/Lmo2, Ets, and Gata factors.

Josette-Renée Landry1, Nicolas Bonadies, Sarah Kinston, Kathy Knezevic, Nicola K Wilson, S Helen Oram, Mary Janes, Sandie Piltz, Michelle Hammett, Jacinta Carter, Tina Hamilton, Ian J Donaldson, Georges Lacaud, Jonathan Frampton, George Follows, Valerie Kouskoff, Berthold Göttgens.   

Abstract

The Lmo2 gene encodes a transcriptional cofactor critical for the development of hematopoietic stem cells. Ectopic LMO2 expression causes leukemia in T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL) patients and severe combined immunodeficiency patients undergoing retroviral gene therapy. Tightly controlled Lmo2 expression is therefore essential, yet no comprehensive analysis of Lmo2 regulation has been published so far. By comparative genomics, we identified 17 highly conserved noncoding elements, 9 of which revealed specific acetylation marks in chromatin-immunoprecipitation and microarray (ChIP-chip) assays performed across 250 kb of the Lmo2 locus in 11 cell types covering different stages of hematopoietic differentiation. All candidate regulatory regions were tested in transgenic mice. An extended LMO2 proximal promoter fragment displayed strong endothelial activity, while the distal promoter showed weak forebrain activity. Eight of the 15 distal candidate elements functioned as enhancers, which together recapitulated the full expression pattern of Lmo2, directing expression to endothelium, hematopoietic cells, tail, and forebrain. Interestingly, distinct combinations of specific distal regulatory elements were required to extend endothelial activity of the LMO2 promoter to yolk sac or fetal liver hematopoietic cells. Finally, Sfpi1/Pu.1, Fli1, Gata2, Tal1/Scl, and Lmo2 were shown to bind to and transactivate Lmo2 hematopoietic enhancers, thus identifying key upstream regulators and positioning Lmo2 within hematopoietic regulatory networks.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19171877     DOI: 10.1182/blood-2008-11-187757

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Blood        ISSN: 0006-4971            Impact factor:   22.113


  47 in total

1.  Identification and characterization of Hoxa9 binding sites in hematopoietic cells.

Authors:  Yongsheng Huang; Kajal Sitwala; Joel Bronstein; Daniel Sanders; Monisha Dandekar; Cailin Collins; Gordon Robertson; James MacDonald; Timothee Cezard; Misha Bilenky; Nina Thiessen; Yongjun Zhao; Thomas Zeng; Martin Hirst; Alfred Hero; Steven Jones; Jay L Hess
Journal:  Blood       Date:  2011-11-09       Impact factor: 22.113

2.  Nuclear adaptor Ldb1 regulates a transcriptional program essential for the maintenance of hematopoietic stem cells.

Authors:  LiQi Li; Raja Jothi; Kairong Cui; Jan Y Lee; Tsadok Cohen; Marat Gorivodsky; Itai Tzchori; Yangu Zhao; Sandra M Hayes; Emery H Bresnick; Keji Zhao; Heiner Westphal; Paul E Love
Journal:  Nat Immunol       Date:  2010-12-26       Impact factor: 25.606

3.  LIM domain only 2 protein expression, LMO2 germline genetic variation, and overall survival in diffuse large B-cell lymphoma in the pre-rituximab era.

Authors:  James R Cerhan; Yasodha Natkunam; Lindsay M Morton; Matthew J Maurer; Yan Asmann; Thomas M Habermann; Mohammad A Vasef; Wendy Cozen; Charles F Lynch; Cristine Allmer; Susan L Slager; Izidore S Lossos; Stephen J Chanock; Nathaniel Rothman; Patricia Hartge; Ahmet Dogan; Sophia S Wang
Journal:  Leuk Lymphoma       Date:  2012-01-03

4.  LMO2 activation by deacetylation is indispensable for hematopoiesis and T-ALL leukemogenesis.

Authors:  Tatsuya Morishima; Ann-Christin Krahl; Masoud Nasri; Yun Xu; Narges Aghaallaei; Betül Findik; Maksim Klimiankou; Malte Ritter; Marcus D Hartmann; Christian Johannes Gloeckner; Sylwia Stefanczyk; Christian Lindner; Benedikt Oswald; Regine Bernhard; Karin Hähnel; Ursula Hermanutz-Klein; Martin Ebinger; Rupert Handgretinger; Nicolas Casadei; Karl Welte; Maya Andre; Patrick Müller; Baubak Bajoghli; Julia Skokowa
Journal:  Blood       Date:  2019-07-31       Impact factor: 22.113

5.  Transcriptional regulation by GATA1 and GATA2 during erythropoiesis.

Authors:  Mikiko Suzuki; Ritsuko Shimizu; Masayuki Yamamoto
Journal:  Int J Hematol       Date:  2011-02-01       Impact factor: 2.490

6.  Efficient discovery of ASCL1 regulatory sequences through transgene pooling.

Authors:  David M McGaughey; Andrew S McCallion
Journal:  Genomics       Date:  2010-03-04       Impact factor: 5.736

7.  PRDM1/Blimp1 downregulates expression of germinal center genes LMO2 and HGAL.

Authors:  Elena Cubedo; Michelle Maurin; Xiaoyu Jiang; Izidore S Lossos; Kenneth L Wright
Journal:  FEBS J       Date:  2011-08-02       Impact factor: 5.542

8.  Modeling reveals bistability and low-pass filtering in the network module determining blood stem cell fate.

Authors:  Jatin Narula; Aileen M Smith; Berthold Gottgens; Oleg A Igoshin
Journal:  PLoS Comput Biol       Date:  2010-05-06       Impact factor: 4.475

9.  Transcriptional regulation of Elf-1: locus-wide analysis reveals four distinct promoters, a tissue-specific enhancer, control by PU.1 and the importance of Elf-1 downregulation for erythroid maturation.

Authors:  Fernando J Calero-Nieto; Andrew D Wood; Nicola K Wilson; Sarah Kinston; Josette-Renée Landry; Berthold Göttgens
Journal:  Nucleic Acids Res       Date:  2010-06-04       Impact factor: 16.971

10.  Discovering hematopoietic mechanisms through genome-wide analysis of GATA factor chromatin occupancy.

Authors:  Tohru Fujiwara; Henriette O'Geen; Sunduz Keles; Kimberly Blahnik; Amelia K Linnemann; Yoon-A Kang; Kyunghee Choi; Peggy J Farnham; Emery H Bresnick
Journal:  Mol Cell       Date:  2009-11-25       Impact factor: 17.970

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