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Merck

HOX-A10 regulates hematopoietic lineage commitment: evidence for a monocyte-specific transcription factor.

Blood (2002-02-07)
Tom Taghon, Frank Stolz, Magda De Smedt, Maggy Cnockaert, Bruno Verhasselt, Jean Plum, Georges Leclercq
RÉSUMÉ

Homeobox genes are well known for their crucial role during embryogenesis but have also been found to be critically involved in normal and leukemic hematopoiesis. Because most previous studies focused on the role of aberrant HOX gene expression in leukemogenesis and because HOX-A10 is expressed in human CD34(+) precursor cells, this study investigated whether HOX-A10 also plays a pivotal role in normal hematopoietic-lineage determination. The effect of enforced expression of this transcription factor on hematopoietic differentiation of highly purified human cord-blood progenitors was examined by using in vitro assays. In fetal thymic organ cultures, a dramatic reduction in cells expressing high levels of HOX-A10 was observed, along with absence of thymocytes positive for CD3(+) T-cell receptor alphabeta. Furthermore, in MS-5 stromal cell cultures, there was a 7-fold reduction in the number of natural killer cells and a 9-fold reduction in the number of B cells, thus showing a profound defect in differentiation toward the lymphoid lineage in HOX-A10-transduced progenitors. In contrast, the number of CD14(+) monocytic cells in the stromal cell culture was 6-fold higher, suggesting an enhanced differentiation toward the myeloid differentiation pathway of HOX-A10-transduced progenitors. However, there was a slight reduction in the number of CD15(+) granulocytic cells, which were blocked in their final maturation. These data show that HOX-A10 can act as an important key regulator of lineage determination in human hematopoietic progenitor cells.