Concise Review: Role of DEK in Stem/Progenitor Cell Biology

Author:

Broxmeyer Hal E.1,Mor-Vaknin Nirit2,Kappes Ferdinand3,Legendre Maureen2,Saha Anjan K.2,Ou Xuan1,O'Leary Heather1,Capitano Maegan1,Cooper Scott1,Markovitz David M.2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, Indiana

2. Division of Infectious Diseases, Department of Internal Medicine, University of Michigan Medical Center, Ann Arbor, Michigan

3. Institute of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Medical School, RWTH Aachen University, Aachen, Germany

Abstract

Abstract Understanding the factors that regulate hematopoiesis opens up the possibility of modifying these factors and their actions for clinical benefit. DEK, a non-histone nuclear phosphoprotein initially identified as a putative proto-oncogene, has recently been linked to regulate hematopoiesis. DEK has myelosuppressive activity in vitro on proliferation of human and mouse hematopoietic progenitor cells and enhancing activity on engraftment of long-term marrow repopulating mouse stem cells, has been linked in coordinate regulation with the transcription factor C/EBPα, for differentiation of myeloid cells, and apparently targets a long-term repopulating hematopoietic stem cell for leukemic transformation. This review covers the uniqueness of DEK, what is known about how it now functions as a nuclear protein and also as a secreted molecule that can act in paracrine fashion, and how it may be regulated in part by dipeptidylpeptidase 4, an enzyme known to truncate and modify a number of proteins involved in activities on hematopoietic cells. Examples are provided of possible future areas of investigation needed to better understand how DEK may be regulated and function as a regulator of hematopoiesis, information possibly translatable to other normal and diseased immature cell systems.

Funder

Public Health Service Grants from the NIH

NIH

Faculty of Medicine, RWTH Aachen

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cell Biology,Developmental Biology,Molecular Medicine

Reference73 articles.

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3. DEK regulates hematopoietic stem engraftment and progenitor cell proliferation;Broxmeyer;Stem Cells Dev,2012

4. C/EBPα and DEK coordinately regulate myeloid differentiation;Koleva;Blood,2012

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