Back to Search Start Over

Atypical protein kinase C (aPKCζ and aPKCλ) is dispensable for mammalian hematopoietic stem cell activity and blood formation

Authors :
Jose A. Cancelas
Jorge Moscat
Hartmut Geiger
Maria Carolina Florian
Eri Ishikawa
Ashley M. Ficker
Maria T. Diaz-Meco
Susan K. Dunn
Angeles Duran
Michael Leitges
Amitava Sengupta
Source :
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 108:9957-9962
Publication Year :
2011
Publisher :
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2011.

Abstract

The stem-cell pool is considered to be maintained by a balance between symmetric and asymmetric division of stem cells. The cell polarity model proposes that the facultative use of symmetric and asymmetric cell division is orchestrated by a polarity complex consisting of partitioning-defective proteins Par3 and Par6, and atypical protein kinase C (aPKCζ and aPKCλ), which regulates planar symmetry of dividing stem cells with respect to the signaling microenvironment. However, the role of the polarity complex is unexplored in mammalian adult stem-cell functions. Here we report that, in contrast to accepted paradigms, polarization and activity of adult hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) do not depend on either aPKCζ or aPKCλ or both in vivo. Mice, having constitutive and hematopoietic-specific (Vav1-Cre) deletion of aPKCζ and aPKCλ, respectively, have normal hematopoiesis, including normal HSC self-renewal, engraftment, differentiation, and interaction with the bone marrow microenvironment. Furthermore, inducible complete deletion of aPKCλ (Mx1-Cre) in aPKCζ −/− HSC does not affect HSC polarization, self-renewal, engraftment, or lineage repopulation. In addition, aPKCζ- and aPKCλ-deficient HSCs elicited a normal pattern of hematopoietic recovery secondary to myeloablative stress. Taken together, the expression of aPKCζ, aPKCλ, or both are dispensable for primitive and adult HSC fate determination in steady-state and stress hematopoiesis, contrary to the hypothesis of a unique, evolutionary conserved aPKCζ/λ-directed cell polarity signaling mechanism in mammalian HSC fate determination.

Details

ISSN :
10916490 and 00278424
Volume :
108
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d12395bb9167ed5250a0bd919b4f0834
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1103132108