Modulation of PKC-α promotes lineage reprogramming of committed B lymphocytes

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Abstract

During hematopoietic lineage development, hematopoietic stem cells sequentially commit toward myeloid or lymphoid lineages in a tightly regulated manner, which under normal circumstances is irreversible. However, studies have established that targeted deletion of the B-lineage specific transcription factor, paired box gene 5 (Pax5), enables B cells to differentiate toward other hematopoietic lineages, in addition to generating progenitor B-cell lymphomas. Our previous studies showed that subversion of protein kinase C (PKC)-α in developing B cells transformed B-lineage cells. Here, we demonstrate that PKC-α modulation in committed CD19 + B lymphocytes also promoted lineage conversion toward myeloid, NK-, and T-cell lineages upon Notch ligation. This occurred via a reduction in Pax5 expression resulting from a downregulation of E47, a product of the E2A gene. T-cell lineage commitment was indicated by the expression of T-cell associated genes Ptcra, Cd3e, and gene rearrangement at the Tcrb gene locus. Importantly, the lineage-converted T cells carried Igh gene rearrangements reminiscent of their B-cell origin. Our findings suggest that modulation of PKC-α induces hematopoietic-lineage plasticity in committed B-lineage cells by perturbing expression of critical B-lineage transcription factors, and deregulation of PKC-α activity/expression represents a potential mechanism for lineage trans-differentiation during malignancies. © 2012 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim.

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Nakagawa, R., Vukovic, M., Cosimo, E., & Michie, A. M. (2012). Modulation of PKC-α promotes lineage reprogramming of committed B lymphocytes. European Journal of Immunology, 42(4), 1005–1015. https://doi.org/10.1002/eji.201141442

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