Phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase/Akt induced by erythropoietin renders the erythroid differentiation factor GATA-1 competent for TIMP-1 gene transactivation

Z Kadri, L Maouche-Chretien, HM Rooke… - … and cellular biology, 2005 - Taylor & Francis
Molecular and cellular biology, 2005Taylor & Francis
The contribution of erythropoietin to the differentiation of the red blood cell lineage remains
elusive, and the demonstration of a molecular link between erythropoietin and the
transcription of genes associated with erythroid differentiation is lacking. In erythroid cells,
expression of the tissue inhibitor of matrix metalloproteinase (TIMP-1) is strictly dependent
on erythropoietin. We report here that erythropoietin regulates the transcription of the TIMP-1
gene upon binding to its receptor in erythroid cells by triggering the activation of …
The contribution of erythropoietin to the differentiation of the red blood cell lineage remains elusive, and the demonstration of a molecular link between erythropoietin and the transcription of genes associated with erythroid differentiation is lacking. In erythroid cells, expression of the tissue inhibitor of matrix metalloproteinase (TIMP-1) is strictly dependent on erythropoietin. We report here that erythropoietin regulates the transcription of the TIMP-1 gene upon binding to its receptor in erythroid cells by triggering the activation of phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K)/Akt. We found that Akt directly phosphorylates the transcription factor GATA-1 at serine 310 and that this site-specific phosphorylation is required for the transcriptional activation of the TIMP-1 promoter. This chain of events can be recapitulated in nonerythroid cells by transfection of the implicated molecular partners, resulting in the expression of the normally silent endogenous TIMP-1 gene. Conversely, TIMP-1 secretion is profoundly decreased in erythroid cells from fetal livers of transgenic knock-in mice homozygous for a GATAS310A gene, which encodes a GATA-1 mutant that cannot be phosphorylated at Ser310. Furthermore, retrovirus-mediated expression of GATAS310A into GATA-1null-derived embryonic stem cells decreases the rate of hemoglobinization by more than 50% compared to expressed wild-type GATA-1. These findings provide the first example of a chain of coupling mechanisms between the binding of erythropoietin to its receptor and GATA-1-dependent gene expression.
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