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Publication : Stage-specific expression of polycomb group genes in human bone marrow cells.

First Author  Lessard J Year  1998
Journal  Blood Volume  91
Issue  4 Pages  1216-24
PubMed ID  9454751 Mgi Jnum  J:45974
Mgi Id  MGI:1196769 Doi  10.1182/blood.v91.4.1216
Citation  Lessard J, et al. (1998) Stage-specific expression of polycomb group genes in human bone marrow cells. Blood 91(4):1216-24
abstractText  Mammalian Polycomb group (Pc-G) genes, constituting some 5 subfamilies based on their identity to the Drosophila genes Pc, Psc, ph, esc, and E(z), appear to play critical roles in maintaining the transcriptional repression state of Hox/HOM-C genes during development. Despite increasing evidence of the important role of Hox genes in both normal hematopoiesis and leukemic transformation, little is known about the expression and possible function played by Pc-G genes in hematopoietic cells. To address this, we first examined the expression of Pc genes in purified CD34(+) human bone marrow cells by reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR), using degenerate primers that specifically amplify the majority of Pc genes. This analysis showed the expression of 8 different Pc genes in CD34(+) bone marrow cells, including HP1(Hsalpha), HP1(Hsgamma), the heterochromatin p25 protein, the human homologue of the murine M32 gene, and 4 novel members of this family. To assess whether Pc-G mRNA levels change during differentiation of bone marrow cells, a quantitative RT-PCR method was used to amplify the total cDNA originating from three purified subpopulations of CD34(+) bone marrow cells known to differ in their ability to grow in long-term or semisolid cultures. In sharp contrast to Hox gene expression, which is highest in the most primitive bone marrow cells, these studies show that the expression level of 8 of the 9 Pc-G genes studied (ie, HP1(Hsalpha), HP1(Hsgamma), M31, M32, M33, Mel-18, Mph1/Rae-28, and ENX-1) markedly increases with differentiation of bone marrow cells. Interestingly, BMI-1 exhibits a strikingly different pattern of expression, with high expression levels in primitive cells and very little expression in mature CD34(-) cells. Together, these results document for the first time that differentiation of human bone marrow cells is accompanied by profound changes in Pc-G gene expression levels.
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