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Publication : Retinoblastoma promotes definitive erythropoiesis by repressing Id2 in fetal liver macrophages.

First Author  Iavarone A Year  2004
Journal  Nature Volume  432
Issue  7020 Pages  1040-5
PubMed ID  15616565 Mgi Jnum  J:95106
Mgi Id  MGI:3525032 Doi  10.1038/nature03068
Citation  Iavarone A, et al. (2004) Retinoblastoma promotes definitive erythropoiesis by repressing Id2 in fetal liver macrophages. Nature 432(7020):1040-5
abstractText  In mammals, the fetal liver is the first site of definitive erythropoiesis-the generation of mature, enucleated red cells. The functional unit for definitive erythropoiesis is the erythroblastic island, a multicellular structure composed of a central macrophage surrounded by erythroblasts at various stages of differentiation. Targeted disruption of the retinoblastoma (Rb) tumour suppressor gene in the mouse leads to embryonic death caused by failure of erythroblasts to enucleate. The erythroid defect has been attributed to loss of Rb in cells that support erythropoiesis, but the identity of these cells is unknown. Here we show that Rb-deficient embryos carry profound abnormalities of fetal liver macrophages that prevent physical interactions with erythroblasts. In contrast, wild-type macrophages bind Rb-deficient erythroblasts and lead them to terminal differentiation and enucleation. Loss of Id2, a helix-loop-helix protein that mediates the lethality of Rb-deficient embryos, rescues the defects of Rb-deficient fetal liver macrophages. Rb promotes differentiation of macrophages by opposing the inhibitory functions of Id2 on the transcription factor PU.1, a master regulator of macrophage differentiation. Thus, Rb has a cell autonomous function in fetal liver macrophages, and restrains Id2 in these cells in order to implement definitive erythropoiesis.
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