http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2010-05/ru-sci050610.php
Rice bioengineers define relationship between key regulatory proteins
With thousands of scientists across the globe searching for ways to use adult stem cells to
fight disease, there's a growing emphasis on finding the "master regulators" that
guide the differentiation of stem cells. New research from Rice University and the University of
Cambridge suggests that a closely connected trio of regulatory proteins fulfills that role in
hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs), the self-renewing cells the body uses to make new blood cells.
The results appear today in the online journal PLoS Computational Biology. Working with
experimentalists at Cambridge, Rice bioengineers Oleg Igoshin and Jatin Narula created a
computer model that accurately describes the observed behavior of the three regulatory proteins
that are collectively known as the "Scl-Gata2-Fli1 triad." "We don't yet have the
experimental verification that this is the master-level regulator for HSCs, but based on our
model, we can say that it has all the properties that we would expect to find in a master-level
regulator," said Igoshin, an assistant professor in bioengineering at Rice.
All plants and animals have stem cells, a constantly replenished feedstock of unspecialized
progenitor cells that have the ability to become any of several specialized types of cell. An
HSC is a type of adult stem cell that forms new blood cells. In a healthy human adult, HSCs are
used to form about 100 billion new white and red blood cells each day.
But HSCs also need to be able to self-renew, or make the additional stem cells needed to
replenish the body's supply. Self-renewal becomes particularly important after significant blood
loss through injury or when patients receive bone marrow transplants.
Igoshin and Narula, a graduate student, worked with experimentalists Aileen Smith and Berthold
Gottgens at the Cambridge Institute for Medical Research to create a mathematical model that
accurately describes the complex interplay among the three HSC regulatory proteins in the
Scl-Gata2-Fli1 triad. Based on previous studies at Cambridge, it was obvious that the triad
plays an essential role in HSC development. In creating their computer model, Igoshin and Narula
were able to quantify the way the three interact and thus shed light on their combined role in
regulating HSCs.
To qualify as a master regulator, the triad needed to meet two criteria. It had to act as a
"bistable" switch, a one-way button that toggled from the "replenish HSC"
state to the "differentiate" state. Second, it needed to ignore extraneous signals and
throw the switch only when a signal persisted.
"In examining the results from the model, we found the triad did have the characteristics
of a master regulator," Narula said. "The first time it's switched on, all the cells
stay on. It also handles deactivation in a controlled manner, so that some cells differentiate
and get deactivated and others don't. Finally, it has the ability to discern whether or not the
level of signal is present only for a short burst or for a significantly long time."
Igoshin said additional experimental research is needed to verify the computer model's
prediction that the Scl-Gata2-Fli1 triad is the master-level controller for HSCs. However, he
said the prediction is particularly intriguing in light of previous studies that suggest other
similarly wired regulatory triads are key players in other types of stem cells, including
embryonic stem cells.
"It's possible that this triad motif is reused elsewhere," Igoshin said. "The
proteins could be different in each case, but the motif structure of their interconnections is
common and may be repeated elsewhere in nature. That's one of the most intriguing aspects of
this research."
The research was supported by Rice University, the National Science Foundation, and Leukemia
and Lymphoma Research UK.
May 6, 2010 (EurekAlert)