Scl regulates the quiescence and the long-term competence of hematopoietic stem cells

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Abstract

The majority of long-term reconstituting hematopoietic stem cells (LT-HSCs) in the adult is in G0, whereas a large proportion of progenitors are more cycling. We show here that the SCL/TAL1 transcription factor is highly expressed in LT-HSCs compared with short-term reconstituting HSCs and progenitors and that SCL negatively regulates the G0-G1 transit of LT-HSCs. Furthermore, when SCL protein levels are decreased by gene targeting or by RNA interference, the reconstitution potential of HSCs is impaired in several transplantation assays. First, the mean stem cell activity of HSCs transplanted at approximately 1 competitive repopulating unit was 2-fold decreased when Scl gene dosage was decreased. Second, Scl+/- HSCs were at a marked competitive disadvantage with Scl+/+ cells when transplanted at 4 competitive repopulating units equivalent. Third, reconstitution of the stem cell pool by adult HSCs expressing Scl-directed shRNAs was decreased compared with controls. At the molecular level, we found that SCLoccupies the Cdkn1a and Id1 loci in primary hematopoietic cells and that the expression levels of these 2 regulators of HSC cell cycle and long-term functions are sensitive to Scl gene dosage. Together, our observations suggest that SCL impedes G0-G1 transition in HSCs and regulates their long-term competence. © 2010 by The American Society of Hematology.

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Lacombe, J., Herblot, S., Rojas-Sutterlin, S., Haman, A., Barakat, S., Iscove, N. N., … Hoang, T. (2010). Scl regulates the quiescence and the long-term competence of hematopoietic stem cells. Blood, 115(4), 792–803. https://doi.org/10.1182/blood-2009-01-201384

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