Pax5 determines B- versus T-cell fate and does not block early myeloid-lineage development

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Abstract

Progenitor B cells deficient in Pax5 are developmentally multipotent, suggesting that Pax5 is necessary to maintain commitment to the B-cell lineage. Commitment may be mediated, in part, by Pax5 repression of myeloid-specific genes. To determine whether Pax5 expression in multipotential cells is sufficient to restrict development to the B-cell lineage in vivo, we enforced expression of Pax5 in hematopoietic stem cells using a retroviral vector. Peripheral blood analysis of all animals reconstituted with Pax5-expressing cells indicated that more than 90% of Pax5-expressing cells were B220+ mature B cells that were not malignant. Further analysis showed that Pax5 completely blocked T-lineage development in the thymus but did not inhibit myelopoiesis or natural killer (NK) cell development in bone marrow. These results implicate Pax5 as a critical regulator of B-versus T-cell developmental fate and suggest that Pax5 may promote commitment to the B-cell lineage by mechanisms that are independent of myeloid gene repression. © 2003 by The American Society of Hematology.

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Cotta, C. V., Zhang, Z., Kim, H. G., & Klug, C. A. (2003). Pax5 determines B- versus T-cell fate and does not block early myeloid-lineage development. Blood, 101(11), 4342–4346. https://doi.org/10.1182/blood-2002-10-3139

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