Citation:
Biochem Biophys Res Commun. 2011 Nov 4;414(4):743-9. doi: 10.1016/j.bbrc.2011.09.149. Epub 2011 Oct 6
Abstract:
Even with the availability of tissue-restricted knockouts, studying the role of essential, multifunctional proteins in vivo is often complicated by the complete loss of cell viability. Here we make use of a knock-down approach to investigate the function of the essential protein PSF (polypyrimidine tract binding protein-associated splicing factor) in thymocytes. PSF is an RNA- and DNA-binding protein that has roles in all aspects of RNA biogenesis from transcription to stability. We show that a 50% reduction in expression of PSF in the thymus leads to an increase in apoptosis and a corresponding decrease in thymic cellularity. Using microarrays we find that thymocytes depleted of PSF show reduced expression of several histone genes relative to wildtype littermates likely due to reduced mRNA stability. Remarkably, reduced expression of a specific one of these histone genes (H2AE from histone cluster 1) is sufficient to induce apoptosis of a cultured T cell line. Therefore, we conclude that PSF contributes to the stability of a subset of histone genes and that loss of H2AE expression in the PSF-deficient thymocytes uniquely contributes to an increase in thymic apoptosis.
Organism or Cell Type:
cell culture: human JSL1 T-cell line