Retrotransposon derepression leads to activation of the unfolded protein response and apoptosis in pro-B cells
Author(s) -
Alessandra Pasquarella,
Anja Ebert,
Gustavo Pereira de Almeida,
Maria Hinterberger,
Maryam Kazerani,
Alexander Nuber,
Joachim W. Ellwart,
Ludger Klein,
Meinrad Busslinger,
Gunnar Schotta
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
development
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.15
H-Index - 36
eISSN - 1477-9129
pISSN - 0950-1991
DOI - 10.1242/dev.130203
Subject(s) - biology , derepression , retrotransposon , h3k4me3 , chromatin , gene silencing , histone , histone methyltransferase , unfolded protein response , genetics , microbiology and biotechnology , psychological repression , epigenetics , gene , promoter , gene expression , transposable element , mutant
The H3K9me3-specific histone methyltransferase Setdb1 impacts on transcriptional regulation by repressing both developmental genes and retrotransposons. How impaired retrotransposon silencing may lead to developmental phenotypes is currently unclear. Here, we show that loss of Setdb1 in pro-B cells completely abrogates B cell development. In pro-B cells, Setdb1 is dispensable for silencing of lineage-inappropriate developmental genes. Instead, we detect strong derepression of endogenous murine leukemia virus (MLV) copies. This activation coincides with an unusual change in chromatin structure, with only partial loss of H3K9me3 and unchanged DNA methylation, but strongly increased H3K4me3. Production of MLV proteins leads to activation of the unfolded protein response pathway and apoptosis. Thus, our data demonstrate that B cell development depends on the proper repression of retrotransposon sequences through Setdb1.
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