The zinc finger-encoding transacting factor EKLF binds key regulatory elements of many erythroid-specific genes, and is essential for definitive erythropoiesis. Mice lacking this factor (EKLF−/−) die of anemia by E15.5 of gestation, failing to activate β-globin gene transcription, and demonstrating a block in the erythroid differentiation program at the primitive erythroblast stage. In contrast, megakaryocytic progenitors are amplified in EKLFnull embryos, with increased Fli-1 gene expression (a marker of early megakaryocytic differentiation), consistent with the idea that EKLF modulates the megakaryocyticerythroid (M-E) differentiation switch. We have demonstrated that an amino terminal mutant of EKLF (Δ221EKLF), is required to induce chromatin remodeling at the β-globin promoter in an EKLF-null erythroid cell line, but additional amino terminal sequences are required for initiation of β-globin gene transcription (Brown et al., 2002). To evaluate the role of this chromatin remodeling (CR) domain in erythroid and megakaryocytic differentiation in vivo, we have generated a knock-in allele of EKLFCR allele. Similar to EKLF-null embryos, mice homozygous for this mutant allele die of anemia by E15.5 of gestation. In contrast to erythroid cells lacking EKLF, EKLFCR/CR progenitors demonstrate

  • appropriate binding of the CR encoding domain to all EKLF-regulatory sequences;

  • a block in erythropoiesis at a more a mature stage in differentiation

  • a chromatin architecture and histone modification pattern at erythroid-specific genes that recapitulates the events observed in EKLF+/+ erythroblasts at a similar stage of erythroid ontogeny;

  • a failure of terminal erythroid gene transcription.

Examining the role of EKLFCR in megakaryopoiesis, we observed

  • inhibition of megakaryocytic progenitor amplification in EKLFCR/CR fetal hematopoietic cell populations when compared to EKLF-null embryos;

  • loss of Fli-1 gene expression in EKLFCR expressing cells;

  • binding of the EKLFCR mutant protein to the Fli-1 promoter with inhibition of gene transcription;

  • a repressed chromatin architecture at megakaryocytic gene loci.

In contrast to these results, mice homozygous for a knockin allele encoding the zinc finger DNA binding domain alone (Δ253EKLF), a region shown previously to be sufficient for chromatin remodeling in vitro, demonstrate erythroid and megakaryocytic phenotypes that resemble those observed in EKLF-null hematopoietic progenitors. Taken together, our results suggest strongly that the unique EKLFCR domain is necessary and sufficient to modulate the chromatin-specific roles of EKLF at erythroid- and megakaryocytic-specific loci in definitive hematopoietic cells in vivo.

Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.

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