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- Title
Regulatory Crosstalk between Physiological Low O 2 Concentration and Notch Pathway in Early Erythropoiesis.
- Authors
Labat, Véronique; Bayard, Eva Nguyen van Thanh dit; Refeyton, Alice; Huart, Mathilde; Avalon, Maryse; Debeissat, Christelle; Rodriguez, Laura; de la Grange, Philippe Brunet; Ivanovic, Zoran; Vlaski-Lafarge, Marija
- Abstract
Physiological low oxygen (O2) concentration (<5%) favors erythroid development ex vivo. It is known that low O2 concentration, via the stabilization of hypoxia-induced transcription factors (HIFs), intervenes with Notch signaling in the control of cell fate. In addition, Notch activation is implicated in the regulation of erythroid differentiation. We test here if the favorable effects of a physiological O2 concentration (3%) on the amplification of erythroid progenitors implies a cooperation between HIFs and the Notch pathway. To this end, we utilized a model of early erythropoiesis ex vivo generated from cord blood CD34+ cells transduced with shHIF1α and shHIF2α at 3% O2 and 20% O2 in the presence or absence of the Notch pathway inhibitor. We observed that Notch signalization was activated by Notch2R–Jagged1 ligand interaction among progenitors. The inhibition of the Notch pathway provoked a modest reduction in erythroid cell expansion and promoted erythroid differentiation. ShHIF1α and particularly shHIF2α strongly impaired erythroid progenitors' amplification and differentiation. Additionally, HIF/NOTCH signaling intersects at the level of multipotent progenitor erythroid commitment and amplification of BFU-E. In that, both HIFs contribute to the expression of Notch2R and Notch target gene HES1. Our study shows that HIF, particularly HIF2, has a determining role in the early erythroid development program, which includes Notch signaling.
- Subjects
ERYTHROPOIESIS; NOTCH genes; CORD blood; ERYTHROCYTE membranes; BLOOD cells; TRANSCRIPTION factors; CELL communication
- Publication
Biomolecules (2218-273X), 2022, Vol 12, Issue 4, p540
- ISSN
2218-273X
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.3390/biom12040540