All it takes is one molecule to reprogram an antibody-producing B cell into
a scavenging macrophage. This transformation is possible, new evidence shows,
because the molecule (C/EBPa, a transcription factor) "short-circuits" the cells
so that they re-express genes reserved for embryonic development. The findings
appear July 30 in Stem Cell Reports, the journal of the International Society
for Stem Cell Research.
Over the past 28 years, researchers have shown that a number of specialized
cell types can be forcibly converted into another, but the science of how this
change takes place is still emerging. Such transdifferentiations, as they're
called, include turning a skin cell into a muscle cell (or a muscle cell into a
brown fat cell) with the addition of just one or two transcription factors.
These are molecules that bind to a cell's DNA and cause other genes to be
expressed.
"For a long time it was unclear whether forcing cell fate decisions by
expressing transcription factors in the wrong cell type could teach us something
about what happens normally during physiological differentiation," says senior
study author Thomas Graf of the Center for Genomic Regulation in Spain. "What we
have now found is that the two processes are actually surprisingly similar."
Based on experiments led by the first author of the study, Chris van
Oevelen, B cell transdifferentiation takes place when C/EBPa binds to two
regions of DNA that act as gene expression enhancers. Whereas one of these
regions is normally active in immune cells, the other is only turned on when
macrophage precursors are ready to differentiate. This indicates that the
convergence of these two enhancer pathways can cause the B cell to act like a
macrophage precursor, thus triggering the unnatural transdifferentiation.
"This has taught us a great deal about how a transcription factor can
activate a new gene expression program (in our case, that of macrophages) but
has left us in the dark about the other part of the equation; namely, how the
factor silences the B cell program, something that must happen if
transdifferentiation is to work," Graf says. "This is one of the questions we
are focusing on now."
Graf is interested in this pathway because C/EBPa-induced, B
cell-to-macrophage transdifferentiation can convert both human B cell lymphoma
or leukemia cells into functional, non-cancerous macrophages. He believes that
induced transdifferentiation could become therapeutically relevant, if a drug
could be found that can replace the transcription factor--not to mention that
understanding the mechanisms of the process would help labs worldwide who use
this transdifferentiation approach to generate cells "a la carte" for
regenerative purposes.
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