Retinoic acid receptor regulation of decision-making for cell differentiation

Geoff Brown*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalReview articlepeer-review

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Abstract

All-trans retinoic acid (ATRA) activation of retinoic acid receptors (RARs) is crucial to an organism’s proper development as established by findings for mouse foetuses from dams fed a vitamin A-deficient diet. ATRA influences decision-making by embryonic stem (ES) cells for differentiation including lineage fate. From studies of knockout mice, RARα and RARγ regulate haematopoiesis whereby active RARα modulates the frequency of decision-making for myeloid differentiation, but is not essential for myelopoiesis, and active RARγ supports stem cell self-renewal and maintenance. From studies of zebrafish embryo development, active RARγ plays a negative role in stem cell decision-making for differentiation whereby, in the absence of exogenous ATRA, selective agonism of RARγ disrupted stem cell decision-making for differentiation patterning for development. From transactivation studies, 0.24 nM ATRA transactivated RARγ and 19.3 nM (80-fold more) was needed to transactivate RARα. Therefore, the dose of ATRA that cells are exposed to in vivo, from gradients created by cells that synthesize and metabolize, is important to RARγ versus RARα and RARγ activation and balancing of the involvements in modulating stem cell maintenance versus decision-making for differentiation. RARγ activation favours stemness whereas concomitant or temporal activation of RARγ and RARα favours differentiation. Crosstalk with signalling events that are provoked by membrane receptors is also important.
Original languageEnglish
Article number1182204
Number of pages10
JournalFrontiers in cell and developmental biology
Volume11
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 4 Apr 2023

Keywords

  • Retinoic acid receptors
  • Vitamin A
  • Stem Cells
  • differentiation
  • Haematopoiesis
  • stem cells
  • vitamin A
  • retinoic acid receptors
  • Cell and Developmental Biology
  • haematopoiesis

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