| Literature DB >> 21596856 |
Hao Yuan1, Jun Zhou, Min Deng, Yong Zhang, Yi Chen, Yi Jin, Jiang Zhu, Sai Juan Chen, Hugues de The, Zhu Chen, Ting Xi Liu, Jun Zhu.
Abstract
Hematopoiesis is evolutionarily conserved from zebrafish to mammals, and this includes both primitive and definitive waves during embryogenesis. Primitive hematopoiesis is dominated by erythropoiesis with limited myelopoiesis. Protein sumoylation, a ubiquitination-like posttranslational protein modification, is implicated in a variety of biochemical processes, most notably in transcriptional repression. We show here that the loss of 6 small ubiquitin-related modifier (SUMO) paralogs triggers a sharp up-regulation of the myeloid-specific marker mpo and down-regulation of the erythroid-specific marker gata1 in myelo-erythroid progenitor cells (MPCs) in the intermediate cell mass (ICM) during primitive hematopoiesis. Accordingly, in transgenic zebrafish lines, hyposumoylation expands myelopoiesis at the expense of erythropoiesis. A SUMO-CCAAT/enhancer-binding protein α (SUMO-C/ebpα) fusion restores the normal myelopoiesis/erythropoiesis balance, suggesting that sumoylation status of C/ebpα contributes to myelo-erythroid lineage determination. Our results therefore implicate sumoylation in early lineage determination and reveal the possible molecular mechanism underlying the puzzling biased primitive hematopoiesis in vertebrates.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21596856 DOI: 10.1182/blood-2010-12-325712
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Blood ISSN: 0006-4971 Impact factor: 22.113