CSL-MAML-dependent Notch1 signaling controls T lineage-specific IL-7R{alpha}gene expression in early human thymopoiesis and leukemia

Abstract

Notch1 activation is essential for T-lineage specification of lymphomyeloid progenitors seeding the thymus. Progression along the T cell lineage further requires cooperative signaling provided by the interleukin 7 receptor (IL-7R), but the molecular mechanisms responsible for the dynamic and lineage-specific regulation of IL-7R during thymopoiesis are unknown. We show that active Notch1 binds to a conserved CSL-binding site in the human IL7R gene promoter and critically regulates IL7R transcription and IL-7R alpha chain (IL-7Ralpha) expression via the CSL-MAML complex. Defective Notch1 signaling selectively impaired IL-7Ralpha expression in T-lineage cells, but not B-lineage cells, and resulted in a compromised expansion of early human developing thymocytes, which was rescued upon ectopic IL-7Ralpha expression. The pathological implications of these findings are demonstrated by the regulation of IL-7Ralpha expression downstream of Notch1 in T cell leukemias. Thus, Notch1 controls early T cell development, in part by regulating the stage- and lineage-specific expression of IL-7Ralpha.

Document Type

Article


Published version

Language

English

Publisher

Rockefeller University Press

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Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1084/jem.20081922

Journal of Experimental Medicine, 2009, vol. 206, num. 4, p. 779-791

https://doi.org/10.1084/jem.20081922

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(c) Rockefeller University Press, 2009

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