Department of Clinical Application, Center for iPS Cell Research and Application, Kyoto University, Kyoto, Japan.
Department of Human Health Sciences, Graduate School of Medicine, Kyoto University, Kyoto, Japan.
PLoS One. 2021 Mar 29;16(3):e0247595. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0247595. eCollection 2021.
Children with Down syndrome (DS) are susceptible to two blood disorders, transient abnormal myelopoiesis (TAM) and Down syndrome-associated acute megakaryocytic leukemia (DS-AMKL). Mutations in GATA binding protein 1 (GATA1) have been identified as the cause of these diseases, and the expression levels of the resulting protein, short-form GATA1 (GATA1s), are known to correlate with the severity of TAM. On the other hand, despite the presence of GATA1 mutations in almost all cases of DS-AMKL, the incidence of DS-AMKL in TAM patients is inversely correlated with the expression of GATA1s. This discovery has required the need to clarify the role of GATA1s in generating the cells of origin linked to the risk of both diseases. Focusing on this point, we examined the characteristics of GATA1 mutant trisomy-21 pluripotent stem cells transfected with a doxycycline (Dox)-inducible GATA1s expression cassette in a stepwise hematopoietic differentiation protocol. We found that higher GATA1s expression significantly reduced commitment into the megakaryocytic lineage at the early hematopoietic progenitor cell (HPC) stage, but once committed, the effect was reversed in progenitor cells and acted to maintain the progenitors. These differentiation stage-dependent reversal effects were in contrast to the results of myeloid lineage, where GATA1s simply sustained and increased the number of immature myeloid cells. These results suggest that although GATA1 mutant cells cause the increase in myeloid and megakaryocytic progenitors regardless of the intensity of GATA1s expression, the pathways vary with the expression level. This study provides experimental support for the paradoxical clinical features of GATA1 mutations in the two diseases.
唐氏综合征(DS)患儿易患两种血液疾病,即一过性髓系增生异常(TAM)和唐氏综合征相关的急性巨核细胞白血病(DS-AMKL)。GATA 结合蛋白 1(GATA1)的突变已被确定为这些疾病的病因,且由此产生的短型 GATA1(GATA1s)的表达水平与 TAM 的严重程度相关。另一方面,尽管在几乎所有 DS-AMKL 病例中都存在 GATA1 突变,但 TAM 患者中 DS-AMKL 的发生率与 GATA1s 的表达呈负相关。这一发现需要阐明 GATA1s 在产生与两种疾病风险相关的起始细胞中的作用。针对这一点,我们研究了在逐步造血分化方案中,转染了 Dox 诱导型 GATA1s 表达盒的 GATA1 突变三体 21 多能干细胞的特征。我们发现,较高的 GATA1s 表达水平在早期造血祖细胞(HPC)阶段显著降低了向巨核细胞谱系的定向分化,但一旦定向分化,在祖细胞中这种作用就会逆转,并起到维持祖细胞的作用。这些分化阶段依赖性的逆转作用与髓系的结果相反,在髓系中,GATA1s 只是维持并增加了不成熟的髓系细胞的数量。这些结果表明,尽管 GATA1 突变细胞会导致髓系和巨核细胞祖细胞的增加,而与 GATA1s 表达的强度无关,但途径随表达水平而异。本研究为两种疾病中 GATA1 突变的矛盾临床特征提供了实验支持。