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Published April 15, 2005 | Supplemental Material
Journal Article Open

Subversion of T lineage commitment by PU.1 in a clonal cell line system

Abstract

Specification of mammalian T lymphocytes involves prolonged developmental plasticity even after lineage-specific gene expression begins. Expression of transcription factor PU.1 may maintain some myeloid-like developmental alternatives until commitment. Commitment could reflect PU.1 shutoff, resistance to PU.1 effects, and/or imposition of a suicide penalty for diversion. Here, we describe subclones from the SCID.adh murine thymic lymphoma, adh.2C2 and adh.6D4, that represent a new tool for probing these mechanisms. PU.1 can induce many adh.2C2 cells to undergo diversion to a myeloid-like phenotype, in an all-or-none fashion with multiple, coordinate gene expression changes; adh.6D4 cells resist diversion, and most die. Diversion depends on the PU.1 Ets domain but not on known interactions in the PEST or Q-rich domains, although the Q-rich domain enhances diversion frequency. Protein kinase C/MAP kinase stimulation can make adh.6D4 cells permissive for diversion without protecting from suicide. These results show distinct roles for regulated cell death and another stimulation-sensitive function that establishes a threshold for diversion competence. PU.1 also diverts normal T-cell precursors from wild type or Bcl2-transgenic mice to a myeloid-like phenotype, upon transduction in short-term culture. The adh.2C2 and adh.6D4 clones thus provide an accessible system for defining mechanisms controlling developmental plasticity in early T-cell development.

Additional Information

© 2005 Elsevier Inc. Received 19 November 2004, Revised 25 January 2005, Accepted 26 January 2005, Available online 26 February 2005. The authors would like to thank Rochelle Diamond, Stephanie Adams, and Pat Koen of the Caltech Flow Cytometry/Cell Sorting Facility for expert cell sorting; Ruben Bayon for outstanding animal care; Alexandra Arias, Tom Taghon, and Mary Yui for many helpful discussions and protocols; Gabriela Hernandez-Hoyos and Harry Green for advice and reagents; Carole Lu of the Caltech Imaging Center for excellent guidance in imaging; the Caltech Biopolymer Synthesis Facility for oligonucleotide synthesis; and Eric Davidson, Rochelle Diamond, and a referee for valuable criticism. This work was supported by NIH grant CA90233.

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Supplemental Material - S0012160605000679-gr11.jpg.ppt

Supplemental Material - S0012160605000679-gr12.jpg__1_.ppt

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Supplemental Material - mmc1.doc

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