Gfi-1B plays a critical role in terminal differentiation of normal and transformed erythroid progenitor cells

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Abstract

Growth factor independence-1B (Gfi-1B) is a transcription factor with a highly conserved transcriptional repressor snail-Gfi-1 (SMAG) domain and 6 zinc-finger domains at the N- and C-terminus, respectively. Disruption of the Gfi-1B gene is lethal in the embryo with failure to produce definitive enucleated erythrocytas. In this study, we analyzed the role of Gfi-1B in human erythropoiesis. We observed an increase of Gfi-1B expression during erythroid maturation of human man primary progenitor cells. We studied the consequences of variations in Gfi-1B expression in 2 transformed cell lines (K562 and UT7 cells), as well as in primary CD36+/GPA- progenitors. A knock-down of Gfi-1B delayed the terminal differentiation of K562 and primary cells. Forced expression of Gfi-1B in UT7 and K562 cells led to an arrest of proliferation and an induction of erythroid differentiation. Enforced expression of Gfi-1B in primary cells at the colony-forming units-erythyroid (CFU-E) stage led to a partial glycophorin A (GPA) induction after erythropoietin (EPO) withdrawal but failed to protect cells from apoptosis. Deletion of the SNAG repressor domain abolished Gfi-1B-induced erythroid maturation, strongly suggesting that Gfi-1B acts in the late stage of erythroid differentiation as a transcriptional repressor. © 2005 by The American Society of Hematology.

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Garçon, L., Lacout, C., Svinartchouk, F., Le Couédic, J. P., Villeval, J. L., Vainchenker, W., & Duménil, D. (2005). Gfi-1B plays a critical role in terminal differentiation of normal and transformed erythroid progenitor cells. Blood, 105(4), 1448–1455. https://doi.org/10.1182/blood-2003-11-4068

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