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1.
Nat Immunol ; 25(6): 1007-1019, 2024 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38816617

ABSTRACT

Rare multipotent stem cells replenish millions of blood cells per second through a time-consuming process, passing through multiple stages of increasingly lineage-restricted progenitors. Although insults to the blood-forming system highlight the need for more rapid blood replenishment from stem cells, established models of hematopoiesis implicate only one mandatory differentiation pathway for each blood cell lineage. Here, we establish a nonhierarchical relationship between distinct stem cells that replenish all blood cell lineages and stem cells that replenish almost exclusively platelets, a lineage essential for hemostasis and with important roles in both the innate and adaptive immune systems. These distinct stem cells use cellularly, molecularly and functionally separate pathways for the replenishment of molecularly distinct megakaryocyte-restricted progenitors: a slower steady-state multipotent pathway and a fast-track emergency-activated platelet-restricted pathway. These findings provide a framework for enhancing platelet replenishment in settings in which slow recovery of platelets remains a major clinical challenge.


Subject(s)
Blood Platelets , Cell Differentiation , Hematopoietic Stem Cells , Megakaryocytes , Blood Platelets/immunology , Blood Platelets/metabolism , Animals , Hematopoietic Stem Cells/cytology , Hematopoietic Stem Cells/metabolism , Mice , Cell Differentiation/immunology , Megakaryocytes/cytology , Cell Lineage , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Hematopoiesis , Thrombopoiesis , Mice, Knockout , Humans , Multipotent Stem Cells/cytology , Multipotent Stem Cells/metabolism , Multipotent Stem Cells/immunology
2.
RNA Biol ; 17(2): 227-239, 2020 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31619139

ABSTRACT

In addition to its role in translation termination, eRF3A has been implicated in the nonsense-mediated mRNA decay (NMD) pathway through its interaction with UPF1. NMD is a RNA quality control mechanism, which detects and degrades aberrant mRNAs as well as some normal transcripts including those that harbour upstream open reading frames in their 5' leader sequence. In this study, we used RNA-sequencing and ribosome profiling to perform a genome wide analysis of the effect of either eRF3A or UPF1 depletion in human cells. Our bioinformatics analyses allow to delineate the features of the transcripts controlled by eRF3A and UPF1 and to compare the effect of each of these factors on gene expression. We find that eRF3A and UPF1 have very different impacts on the human transcriptome, less than 250 transcripts being targeted by both factors. We show that eRF3A depletion globally derepresses the expression of mRNAs containing translated uORFs while UPF1 knockdown derepresses only the mRNAs harbouring uORFs with an AUG codon in an optimal context for translation initiation. Finally, we also find that eRF3A and UPF1 have opposite effects on ribosome protein gene expression. Together, our results provide important elements for understanding the impact of translation termination and NMD on the human transcriptome and reveal novel determinants of ribosome biogenesis regulation.


Subject(s)
Gene Expression Regulation , Nonsense Mediated mRNA Decay , Open Reading Frames/genetics , Peptide Termination Factors/metabolism , RNA Helicases/genetics , RNA, Messenger/genetics , Ribosomal Proteins/genetics , Trans-Activators/genetics
3.
Nat Commun ; 14(1): 6062, 2023 09 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37770432

ABSTRACT

Hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) residing in specialized niches in the bone marrow are responsible for the balanced output of multiple short-lived blood cell lineages in steady-state and in response to different challenges. However, feedback mechanisms by which HSCs, through their niches, sense acute losses of specific blood cell lineages remain to be established. While all HSCs replenish platelets, previous studies have shown that a large fraction of HSCs are molecularly primed for the megakaryocyte-platelet lineage and are rapidly recruited into proliferation upon platelet depletion. Platelets normally turnover in an activation-dependent manner, herein mimicked by antibodies inducing platelet activation and depletion. Antibody-mediated platelet activation upregulates expression of Interleukin-1 (IL-1) in platelets, and in bone marrow extracellular fluid in vivo. Genetic experiments demonstrate that rather than IL-1 directly activating HSCs, activation of bone marrow Lepr+ perivascular niche cells expressing IL-1 receptor is critical for the optimal activation of quiescent HSCs upon platelet activation and depletion. These findings identify a feedback mechanism by which activation-induced depletion of a mature blood cell lineage leads to a niche-dependent activation of HSCs to reinstate its homeostasis.


Subject(s)
Interleukin-1 , Thrombocytopenia , Humans , Interleukin-1/metabolism , Hematopoietic Stem Cells/metabolism , Bone Marrow/metabolism , Megakaryocytes , Thrombocytopenia/metabolism
4.
Oncotarget ; 9(40): 26171-26182, 2018 May 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29899850

ABSTRACT

The earliest step in the mRNA degradation process is deadenylation, a progressive shortening of the mRNA poly(A) tail by deadenylases. The question of when deadenylation takes place remains open. MYC mRNA is one of the rare examples for which it was proposed a shortening of the poly(A) tail during ongoing translation. In this study, we analyzed the poly(A) tail length distribution of various mRNAs, including MYC mRNA. The mRNAs were isolated from the polysomal fractions of polysome profiling experiments and analyzed using ligase-mediated poly(A) test analysis. We show that, for all the mRNAs tested with the only exception of MYC, the poly(A) tail length distribution does not change in accordance with the number of ribosomes carried by the mRNA. Conversely, for MYC mRNA, we observed a poly(A) tail length decrease in the fractions containing the largest polysomes. Because the fractions with the highest number of ribosomes are also those for which translation termination is more frequent, we analyzed the poly(A) tail length distribution in polysomal fractions of cells depleted in translation termination factor eRF3. Our results show that the shortening of MYC mRNA poly(A) tail is alleviated by the silencing of translation termination factor eRF3. These findings suggest that MYC mRNA is co-translationally deadenylated and that the deadenylation process requires translation termination to proceed.

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