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A KRAB/KAP1-miRNA Cascade Regulates Erythropoiesis Through Stage-Specific Control of Mitophagy
Author(s) -
Isabelle Barde,
Benjamin Rauwel,
Ray Marcel Marin-Florez,
Andrea Corsinotti,
Elisa Laurenti,
Sonia Verp,
Sandra Offner,
Julien Marquis,
Adamandia Kapopoulou,
Jiří Vaníček,
Didier Trono
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 12.556
H-Index - 1186
eISSN - 1095-9203
pISSN - 0036-8075
DOI - 10.1126/science.1232398
Subject(s) - mitophagy , erythropoiesis , biology , gene silencing , haematopoiesis , repressor , chromatin , zinc finger , transcription factor , microbiology and biotechnology , microrna , genetics , krüppel , psychological repression , gene , gene expression , stem cell , autophagy , apoptosis , medicine , anemia
During hematopoiesis, lineage- and stage-specific transcription factors work in concert with chromatin modifiers to direct the differentiation of all blood cells. We explored the role of KRAB-containing zinc finger proteins (KRAB-ZFPs) and their cofactor KAP1 in this process. In mice, hematopoietic-restricted deletion of Kap1 resulted in severe hypoproliferative anemia. Kap1-deleted erythroblasts failed to induce mitophagy-associated genes and retained mitochondria. This was due to persistent expression of microRNAs (miRNAs) targeting mitophagy transcripts, itself secondary to a lack of repression by stage-specific KRAB-ZFPs. The KRAB/KAP1-miRNA regulatory cascade is evolutionarily conserved, as it also controls mitophagy during human erythropoiesis. Thus, a multilayered transcription regulatory system is present, in which protein- and RNA-based repressors are superimposed in combinatorial fashion to govern the timely triggering of an important differentiation event.

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