scholarly journals Erythroid differentiation in mouse erythroleukemia cells is driven via actin filament-tropomodulin3-tropomyosin networks

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Arit Ghosh ◽  
Megan Coffin ◽  
Richard West ◽  
Velia M Fowler

Erythroid differentiation (ED) is a complex cellular process entailing morphologically distinct maturation stages of erythroblasts during terminal differentiation. Studies of actin filament assembly and organization during terminal ED have revealed essential roles for the pointed-end actin filament capping proteins, tropomodulins (Tmod1 and Tmod3). Additionally, tropomyosin (Tpm) binding to Tmods is a key feature promoting Tmod-mediated actin filament capping. Global deletion of Tmod3 leads to embryonic lethality in mice with impaired ED. To test a cell autonomous function for Tmod3 and further decipher its biochemical function during ED, we generated a Tmod3 knockout in a mouse erythroleukemia cell line (Mel ds19). Tmod3 knockout cells appeared normal prior to ED, but showed defects during progression of ED, characterized by a marked failure to reduce cell and nuclear size, reduced viability and increased apoptosis. In Mel ds19 cells, both Tpms and actin were preferentially associated with the Triton-X 100 insoluble cytoskeleton during ED, indicating Tpm-coated actin filament assembly during ED. While loss of Tmod3 did not lead to a change in total actin levels, it led to a severe reduction in the proportion of Tpms and actin associated with the Triton-X 100 insoluble cytoskeleton during ED. We conclude that Tmod3-regulation of actin cytoskeleton assembly via Tpms is integral to morphological maturation and cell survival during normal erythroid terminal differentiation.

2019 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Tommi Kotila ◽  
Hugo Wioland ◽  
Giray Enkavi ◽  
Konstantin Kogan ◽  
Ilpo Vattulainen ◽  
...  

AbstractThe ability of cells to generate forces through actin filament turnover was an early adaptation in evolution. While much is known about how actin filaments grow, mechanisms of their disassembly are incompletely understood. The best-characterized actin disassembly factors are the cofilin family proteins, which increase cytoskeletal dynamics by severing actin filaments. However, the mechanism by which severed actin filaments are recycled back to monomeric form has remained enigmatic. We report that cyclase-associated-protein (CAP) works in synergy with cofilin to accelerate actin filament depolymerization by nearly 100-fold. Structural work uncovers the molecular mechanism by which CAP interacts with actin filament pointed end to destabilize the interface between terminal actin subunits, and subsequently recycles the newly-depolymerized actin monomer for the next round of filament assembly. These findings establish CAP as a molecular machine promoting rapid actin filament depolymerization and monomer recycling, and explain why CAP is critical for actin-dependent processes in all eukaryotes.


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maria Hoyer ◽  
Jose Rafael Cabral Correia ◽  
Don C. Lamb ◽  
Alvaro H. Crevenna

ABSTRACTActin filament dynamics underlie key cellular processes, such as cell motility. Although actin filament elongation has been extensively studied under the past decades, the mechanism of filament nucleation remains unclear. Here, we immobilized gelsolin, a pointed-end nucleator, at the bottom of zero-mode waveguides to directly monitor the early steps of filament assembly. Our data revealed extensive dynamics and that only one, of two populations, elongates. Annalysis of the kinetics revealed a more stable trimer but a less stable tetramer in the elongating population compared to the non-elongating one. Furthermore, blocking flattening, the conformational change associated with filament formation, prevented the formation of both types of assemblies. Thus, flattening and the initial monomer arrangement determine gelsolin-mediated filament initiation.


Cytoskeleton ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 69 (6) ◽  
pp. 337-370 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sawako Yamashiro ◽  
David S. Gokhin ◽  
Sumiko Kimura ◽  
Roberta B. Nowak ◽  
Velia M. Fowler

2017 ◽  
Vol 114 (38) ◽  
pp. 10107-10112 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xiaofei Gao ◽  
Hsiang-Ying Lee ◽  
Wenbo Li ◽  
Randall Jeffrey Platt ◽  
M. Inmaculada Barrasa ◽  
...  

An effect of thyroid hormone (TH) on erythropoiesis has been known for more than a century but the molecular mechanism(s) by which TH affects red cell formation is still elusive. Here we demonstrate an essential role of TH during terminal human erythroid cell differentiation; specific depletion of TH from the culture medium completely blocked terminal erythroid differentiation and enucleation. Treatment with TRβ agonists stimulated premature erythroblast differentiation in vivo and alleviated anemic symptoms in a chronic anemia mouse model by regulating erythroid gene expression. To identify factors that cooperate with TRβ during human erythroid terminal differentiation, we conducted RNA-seq in human reticulocytes and identified nuclear receptor coactivator 4 (NCOA4) as a critical regulator of terminal differentiation. Furthermore,Ncoa4−/−mice are anemic in perinatal periods and fail to respond to TH by enhanced erythropoiesis. Genome-wide analysis suggests that TH promotes NCOA4 recruitment to chromatin regions that are in proximity to Pol II and are highly associated with transcripts abundant during terminal differentiation. Collectively, our results reveal the molecular mechanism by which TH functions during red blood cell formation, results that are potentially useful to treat certain anemias.


Blood ◽  
2006 ◽  
Vol 108 (11) ◽  
pp. 1117-1117
Author(s):  
Ramona Pop ◽  
Srijana Ranjit ◽  
Merav Socolovsky

Abstract The essential role of glycoprotein hormone erythropoietin (Epo) and its receptor, EpoR, in erythroid development is well established: both the EpoR−/− and Epo−/− mouse embryos die on embryonic day 13 (E13) due to failure of definitive erythropoiesis in fetal liver (Wu et al. 1995). It has been suggested that Epo’s principal role during erythropoiesis is to protect erythroid progenitors from apoptosis (Koury and Bondurant, Science 1990). Bcl-xL, an anti-apoptotic member of the bcl-2 family, is induced by EpoR signaling in erythroid cells via the Jak2/Stat5 pathway (Silva et al., Blood 1996; Socolovsky et al., Cell, 1999). Bcl-xL is essential for erythroid maturation: bcl-xL−/− embryos die in utero at the same stage as as EpoR−/− mice, lacking definitive erythropoiesis (Motoyama et al., Science 1995; J Exp Med, 1999). Recenlty, it has been shown that over-expression of bcl-xL in primary wild-type erythroblasts confers Epo independence on these cells in vitro and allows them to complete their differentiaion into red blood cells (Dolznig et al., Curr Biol, 2002). Here we reasoned that if the principal function of EpoR signaling is suppression of apoptosis via bcl-xL, it should be possible to rescue all aspects of erythroid differentiation in EpoR−/− fetal liver progenitors by retrovirally-transducing these cells with bcl-xL. We infected EpoR−/− fetal liver progenitors with bicistronic retroviral vectors expressing either bcl-xL or EpoR, each linked via an IRES sequence to a GFP reporter. Control EpoR−/− cells were infected with ‘empty’ bicistronic vector. Infection rates were in excess of 30% for all constructs, and transduced cells were identified for further analysis using GFP fluorescence. We examined terminal differentiation of the transduced EpoR−/− cells over the ensuing 48 hours, using several distinct assays, including their expression of the cell-surface differentiation markers CD71 and Ter119 by FACS, their ability to give rise to CFU-e colonies in semi-solid medium, their cell-cycle status using DNA content analysis and BrdU incorporation, and their maturation and hemoglobinization by diaminobenzidine staining and light microscopy. We found that EpoR−/− progenitors transduced with bcl-xL were protected from apoptosis, and underwent morphological changes characteristic of erythroid maturation, including decreasing cell size, nuclear condensation and expulsion, and accumulation of hemoglobin. These cells also upregulated the erythroid-specific cell surface marker Ter119. However, unlike EpoR−/− cells transduced with EpoR, bcl-xL -transduced cells did not express high levels of CD71, and failed to give rise to CFU-e colonies in semi-solid medium. Instead, they gave rise to small colonies of 6 cells or less. Cell cycle analysis showed that, throughout the 48 hours of erythroid terminal differentiation, the population of bcl-xL-transduced EpoR−/− cells had a lower fraction of cells in S-phase than control, EpoR-transduced EpoR−/− cells. The cell-cycle status of control, terminally-differentiating wild-type erythroid fetal liver progenitors was not altered by transduction with bcl-xL, excluding the possibility that it directly inhibits S-phase. Taken together our results indicate that bcl-xL does not rescue all aspects of erythroid differentiation in EpoR−/− erythroid progenitors. Specifically, the proliferative program during erythroid terminal differentiation is directly dependent on EpoR signaling, and is not simply a default pathway secondary to EpoR’s anti-apoptotic effect.


Blood ◽  
2006 ◽  
Vol 107 (11) ◽  
pp. 4291-4299 ◽  
Author(s):  
Binghui Li ◽  
Nan Jia ◽  
Reuben Kapur ◽  
Kristin T. Chun

AbstractAs erythroid progenitors differentiate into precursors and finally mature red blood cells, lineage-specific genes are induced, and proliferation declines until cell cycle exit. Cul4A encodes a core subunit of a ubiquitin ligase that targets proteins for ubiquitin-mediated degradation, and Cul4A-haploinsufficient mice display hematopoietic dysregulation with fewer multipotential and erythroid-committed progenitors. In this study, stress induced by 5-fluorouracil or phenylhydrazine revealed a delay in the recovery of erythroid progenitors, early precursors, and normal hematocrits in Cul4A+/– mice. Conversely, overexpression of Cul4A in a growth factor-dependent, proerythroblast cell line increased proliferation and the proportion of cells in S phase. When these proerythroblasts were induced to terminally differentiate, endogenous Cul4A protein expression declined 3.6-fold. Its enforced expression interfered with erythrocyte maturation and cell cycle exit and, instead, promoted proliferation. Furthermore, p27 normally accumulates during erythroid terminal differentiation, but Cul4A-enforced expression destabilized p27 and attenuated its accumulation. Cul4A and p27 proteins coimmunoprecipitate, indicating that a Cul4A ubiquitin ligase targets p27 for degradation. These findings indicate that a Cul4A ubiquitin ligase positively regulates proliferation by targeting p27 for degradation and that Cul4A down-regulation during terminal erythroid differentiation allows p27 to accumulate and signal cell cycle exit.


2017 ◽  
Vol 216 (5) ◽  
pp. 1211-1213
Author(s):  
Christina L. Vizcarra ◽  
Margot E. Quinlan

Competing models have been proposed for actin filament nucleation by the bacterial proteins VopL/F. In this issue, Burke et al. (2017. J. Cell Biol. https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.201608104) use direct observation to demonstrate that VopL/F bind the barbed and pointed ends of actin filaments but only nucleate new filaments from the pointed end.


1986 ◽  
Vol 102 (4) ◽  
pp. 1157-1163 ◽  
Author(s):  
M Staufenbiel ◽  
E Lazarides

Protein 4.1 is a peripheral membrane protein that strengthens the actin-spectrin based membrane skeleton of the red blood cell and also serves to attach this structure to the plasma membrane. In avian erythrocytes it exists as a family of closely related polypeptides that are differentially expressed during erythropoiesis. We have analyzed the synthesis and assembly onto the membrane skeleton of protein 4.1 and in this paper we show that its assembly is extremely rapid and highly efficient since greater than 95% of the molecules synthesized are assembled in less than 1 min. The remaining minor fraction of unassembled protein 4.1 differs kinetically and is either degraded or assembled with slower kinetics. All protein 4.1 variants exhibit a similar kinetic behavior irrespective of the stage of erythroid differentiation. Thus, the amount and the variants ratio of protein 4.1 assembled are determined largely at the transcriptional or at the translational level and not posttranslationally. During erythroid terminal differentiation the molar amounts of protein 4.1 and spectrin assembled change. In postmitotic cells, as compared with proliferative cells, far more protein 4.1 than spectrin is assembled onto the membrane-skeleton. This modulation may permit the assembly of an initially flexible membrane skeleton in mitotic erythroid cells. As cells become postmitotic and undergo the final steps of maturation the membrane skeleton may be gradually stabilized by the assembly of protein 4.1.


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