Identification of ZBP-89 as a novel GATA-1-associated transcription factor involved in megakaryocytic and erythroid development

AJ Woo, TB Moran, YL Schindler, SK Choe… - … and cellular biology, 2008 - Taylor & Francis
AJ Woo, TB Moran, YL Schindler, SK Choe, NB Langer, MR Sullivan, Y Fujiwara, BH Paw…
Molecular and cellular biology, 2008Taylor & Francis
A complete understanding of the transcriptional regulation of developmental lineages
requires that all relevant factors be identified. Here, we have taken a proteomic approach to
identify novel proteins associated with GATA-1, a lineage-restricted zinc finger transcription
factor required for terminal erythroid and megakaryocytic maturation. We identify the Krüppel-
type zinc finger transcription factor ZBP-89 as being a component of multiprotein complexes
involving GATA-1 and its essential cofactor Friend of GATA-1 (FOG-1). Using chromatin …
A complete understanding of the transcriptional regulation of developmental lineages requires that all relevant factors be identified. Here, we have taken a proteomic approach to identify novel proteins associated with GATA-1, a lineage-restricted zinc finger transcription factor required for terminal erythroid and megakaryocytic maturation. We identify the Krüppel-type zinc finger transcription factor ZBP-89 as being a component of multiprotein complexes involving GATA-1 and its essential cofactor Friend of GATA-1 (FOG-1). Using chromatin immunoprecipitation assays, we show that GATA-1 and ZBP-89 cooccupy cis-regulatory elements of certain erythroid and megakaryocyte-specific genes, including an enhancer of the GATA-1 gene itself. Loss-of-function studies in zebrafish and mice demonstrate an in vivo requirement for ZBP-89 in megakaryopoiesis and definitive erythropoiesis but not primitive erythropoiesis, phenocopying aspects of FOG-1- and GATA-1-deficient animals. These findings identify ZBP-89 as being a novel transcription factor involved in erythroid and megakaryocytic development and suggest that it serves a cooperative function with GATA-1 and/or FOG-1 in a developmental stage-specific manner.
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