Dendritic cell fate is determined by BCL11A

GC Ippolito, JD Dekker, YH Wang… - Proceedings of the …, 2014 - National Acad Sciences
GC Ippolito, JD Dekker, YH Wang, BK Lee, AL Shaffer III, J Lin, JK Wall, BS Lee, LM Staudt
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2014National Acad Sciences
The plasmacytoid dendritic cell (pDC) is vital to the coordinated action of innate and
adaptive immunity. pDC development has not been unequivocally traced, nor has its
transcriptional regulatory network been fully clarified. Here we confirm an essential
requirement for the BCL11A transcription factor in fetal pDC development, and demonstrate
this lineage-specific requirement in the adult organism. Furthermore, we identify BCL11A
gene targets and provide a molecular mechanism for its action in pDC commitment …
The plasmacytoid dendritic cell (pDC) is vital to the coordinated action of innate and adaptive immunity. pDC development has not been unequivocally traced, nor has its transcriptional regulatory network been fully clarified. Here we confirm an essential requirement for the BCL11A transcription factor in fetal pDC development, and demonstrate this lineage-specific requirement in the adult organism. Furthermore, we identify BCL11A gene targets and provide a molecular mechanism for its action in pDC commitment. Embryonic germ-line deletion of Bcl11a revealed an absolute cellular, molecular, and functional absence of pDCs in fetal mice. In adults, deletion of Bcl11a in hematopoietic stem cells resulted in perturbed yet continued generation of progenitors, loss of downstream pDC and B-cell lineages, and persisting myeloid, conventional dendritic, and T-cell lineages. Challenge with virus resulted in a marked reduction of antiviral response in conditionally deleted adults. Genome-wide analyses of BCL11A DNA binding and expression revealed that BCL11A regulates transcription of E2-2 and other pDC differentiation modulators, including ID2 and MTG16. Our results identify BCL11A as an essential, lineage-specific factor that regulates pDC development, supporting a model wherein differentiation into pDCs represents a primed “default” pathway for common dendritic cell progenitors.
National Acad Sciences