Transcription factor-driven coordination of cell cycle exit and lineage-specification in vivo during granulocytic differentiation: In memoriam Professor Niels Borregaard

Kim Theilgaard-Monch*, Sachin Pundhir, Kristian Reckzeh, Jinyu Su, Marta Tapia, Benjamin Furtwangler, Johan Jendholm, Janus Schou Jakobsen, Marie Sigurd Hasemann, Kasper Jermiin Knudsen, Jack Bernard Cowland, Anna Fossum, Erwin Schoof, Mikkel Bruhn Schuster, Bo T. Porse*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

135 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Differentiation of multipotent stem cells into mature cells is fundamental for development and homeostasis of mammalian tissues, and requires the coordinated induction of lineage-specific transcriptional programs and cell cycle withdrawal. To understand the underlying regulatory mechanisms of this fundamental process, we investigated how the tissue-specific transcription factors, CEBPA and CEBPE, coordinate cell cycle exit and lineage-specification in vivo during granulocytic differentiation. We demonstrate that CEBPA promotes lineage-specification by launching an enhancer-primed differentiation program and direct activation of CEBPE expression. Subsequently, CEBPE confers promoter-driven cell cycle exit by sequential repression of MYC target gene expression at the G1/S transition and E2F-meditated G2/M gene expression, as well as by the up-regulation of Cdk1/2/4 inhibitors. Following cell cycle exit, CEBPE unleashes the CEBPA-primed differentiation program to generate mature granulocytes. These findings highlight how tissue-specific transcription factors coordinate cell cycle exit with differentiation through the use of distinct gene regulatory elements. Here the authors show that differentiation of haematopoietic stem cells into mature blood cells is primed by cell type-specific transcription factors at the enhancer level during early differentiation, before they confere promoter-driven growth arrest, and activate post-mitotic terminal differentiation.
Original languageEnglish
Article number3595
JournalNature Communications
Volume13
Number of pages17
ISSN2041-1723
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2022

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Transcription factor-driven coordination of cell cycle exit and lineage-specification in vivo during granulocytic differentiation: In memoriam Professor Niels Borregaard'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this