Frontiers in Immunology (Mar 2019)

The Concerted Action of E2-2 and HEB Is Critical for Early Lymphoid Specification

  • Thibault Bouderlique,
  • Lucia Peña-Pérez,
  • Shabnam Kharazi,
  • Miriam Hils,
  • Xiaoze Li,
  • Aleksandra Krstic,
  • Ayla De Paepe,
  • Christian Schachtrup,
  • Charlotte Gustafsson,
  • Dan Holmberg,
  • Kristina Schachtrup,
  • Robert Månsson,
  • Robert Månsson

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2019.00455
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10

Abstract

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The apparition of adaptive immunity in Gnathostomata correlates with the expansion of the E-protein family to encompass E2-2, HEB, and E2A. Within the family, E2-2 and HEB are more closely evolutionarily related but their concerted action in hematopoiesis remains to be explored. Here we show that the combined disruption of E2-2 and HEB results in failure to express the early lymphoid program in Common lymphoid precursors (CLPs) and a near complete block in B-cell development. In the thymus, Early T-cell progenitors (ETPs) were reduced and T-cell development perturbed, resulting in reduced CD4 T- and increased γδ T-cell numbers. In contrast, hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs), erythro-myeloid progenitors, and innate immune cells were unaffected showing that E2-2 and HEB are dispensable for the ancestral hematopoietic lineages. Taken together, this E-protein dependence suggests that the appearance of the full Gnathostomata E-protein repertoire was critical to reinforce the gene regulatory circuits that drove the emergence and expansion of the lineages constituting humoral immunity.

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