Journal Article
Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
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Reprogramming of committed T cell progenitors to macrophages and dendritic cells by C/EBP alpha and PU.1 transcription factors.

Immunity 2006 November
The differentiation potential of T lineage cells becomes restricted soon after entry of multipotent precursors into the thymus and is accompanied by a downregulation of the transcription factors C/EBP alpha and PU.1. To investigate this restriction point, we have expressed C/EBP alpha and PU.1 in fully committed pre-T cells and found that C/EBP alpha (and C/EBP beta) induced the formation of functional macrophages. In contrast, PU.1 converted them into myeloid dendritic cells under identical culture conditions. C/EBP alpha-induced reprogramming is complex because upregulation of some but not all myelomonocytic markers required endogenous PU.1. Notch signaling partially inhibited C/EBP alpha-induced macrophage formation and completely blocked PU.1-induced dendritic cell formation. Likewise, expression of intracellular Notch or the transcription factor GATA-3 inhibited C/EBP alpha-induced lineage conversion. Our data show that committed T cell progenitors remain susceptible to the lineage instructive effects of myeloid transcription factors and suggest that Notch signaling induces T lineage restriction by downregulating C/EBP alpha and PU.1 in multilineage precursors.

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