Publications by authors named "D Lancki"

Considerable progress is being achieved in the analysis of gene regulatory networks that direct cell fate decisions within the hematopoietic system. In addition to transcription factors that are pivotal for cell fate specification and commitment, recent evidence suggests the involvement of microRNAs. In this review we attempt to integrate these two types of regulatory components into circuits that dictate cell fate choices leading to the generation of innate as well as adaptive immune cells.

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Alternative lineage restriction and B cell fate commitment require the transcription factor Pax5, but the function of early B cell factor (EBF) in these processes remains mostly unexplored. Here we show that in the absence of EBF, 'expandable' and clonal lymphoid progenitor cells retained considerable myeloid potential. Conversely, ectopic expression of EBF in multipotential progenitor cells directed B cell generation at the expense of myeloid cell fates.

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Hematopoietic stem cells and their progenitors exhibit multilineage patterns of gene expression. Molecular mechanisms underlying the generation and refinement of these patterns during cell fate determination remain unexplored because of the absence of suitable experimental systems. Using PU.

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Article Synopsis
  • - The generation of B lymphocyte precursors relies on transcription factors like PU.1, Ikaros, E2A, EBF, and Pax-5, with PU.1 being crucial for the presence of specific progenitors and gene expression.
  • - Loss of PU.1 leads to a significant reduction in certain lymphoid progenitors and impairs the expression of key B cell regulators EBF and Pax-5, but restoring EBF helps produce pro-B cells in PU.1- deficient environments.
  • - EBF is essential for inducing Pax-5 and the initial expression of B lineage genes, but it cannot be substituted by Pax-5 alone in progenitors lacking PU.1 or EBF, highlighting a
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Hematopoietic transcription factors are essential for specifying cell fates; however, the function of cytokines in such developmental decisions is unresolved. We demonstrate here that haploinsufficiency for the gene encoding the transcription factor PU.1 partially suppresses the neutropenia of mice deficient in granulocyte colony-stimulating factor.

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