Identification of novel regulators of developmental hematopoiesis using Endoglin regulatory elements as molecular probes

Journal Article (2016)
Authors

Rabab Nasrallah (University of New South Wales, Australia)

Eva M. Fast (Harvard Medical School, Harvard University)

Parham Solaimani (Erasmus MC)

Kathy Knezevic (University of New South Wales, Australia)

Alexia Eliades (The University of Manchester)

Rahima Patel (The University of Manchester)

Roshana Thambyrajah (The University of Manchester)

Chris S. Vink (The University of Edinburgh)

John E. Pimanda (University of New South Wales, Australia, Prince of Wales Hospital)

G.B. More Authors (External organisation)

Affiliation
External organisation
To reference this document use:
https://doi.org/10.1182/blood-2016-02-697870
More Info
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Publication Year
2016
Language
English
Affiliation
External organisation
Issue number
15
Volume number
128
Pages (from-to)
1928-1939
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.1182/blood-2016-02-697870

Abstract

Enhancers are the primary determinants of cell identity, and specific promoter/enhancer combinations of Endoglin (ENG) have been shown to target blood and endothelium in the embryo. Here, we generated a series of embryonic stem cell lines, each targeted with reporter constructs driven by specific promoter/enhancer combinations of ENG, to evaluate their discriminative potential and value as molecular probes of the corresponding transcriptome. The Eng promoter (P) in combination with the 28/17/19-kb enhancers, targeted cells in FLK1 mesoderm that were enriched for blast colony forming potential, whereas the P/28-kb enhancer targeted TIE21/c-KIT1/CD412 endothelial cells that were enriched for hematopoieticpotential. These fractions were isolated using reporter expression and their transcriptomes profiled by RNA-seq. There was high concordance between our signatures and those from embryos with defects at corresponding stages of hematopoiesis. Of the 6 genes that were upregulated in both hemogenic mesoderm and hemogenic endothelial fractions targeted by the reporters,LRP2, amultiligandreceptor,wasthe only gene that hadnot previously been associated with hematopoiesis.WeshowthatLRP2is indeedinvolved indefinitivehematopoiesisandbydoingsovalidatetheuseof reportergene-coupled enhancers as probes to gain insights into transcriptional changes that facilitate cell fate transitions.

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