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result(s) for
"GATA2 Deficiency - metabolism"
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Human iPSCs-based modeling unveils SETBP1 as a driver of chromatin rewiring in GATA2 deficiency
2025
Patients with GATA2 deficiency are predisposed to developing myelodysplastic neoplasms (MDS), which can progress to acute myeloid leukemia. This progression is often associated with cytogenetic and somatic alterations. Mutations in SETBP1 and ASXL1 genes are recurrently observed in GATA2 patients, although their roles remain poorly understood. Here we develop a hiPSC-based system to investigate the impact of SETBP1 and ASXL1 mutations in GATA2 deficiency. Using precise genome editing, we recreate stepwise mutational trajectories observed in GATA2-related MDS. We demonstrate that GATA2 mutation has limited impact on hematopoietic progenitors, while the co-occurrence of SETBP1 or ASXL1 mutations impairs myeloid differentiation. The combination of all three mutations severely depletes myeloid progenitors, recapitulating GATA2-related MDS and highlighting their synergistic interplay. Notably, SETBP1 mutation plays a dominant role in establishing a stable chromatin accessibility landscape, even when co-occurring with ASXL1. Our study establishes an iPSC-based model of GATA2 deficiency, offering new insights into myeloid disease progression and a platform for testing future therapeutic strategies.
GATA2 deficiency is one of the major causes of hereditary pediatric myelodysplastic neoplasms (MDS). Using iPSC-based models, this work recapitulates stepwise mutational trajectories in GATA2-related MDS and reveals their impact on myeloid differentiation.
Journal Article
GATA2 mutated allele specific expression is associated with a hyporesponsive state of HSC in GATA2 deficiency syndrome
2025
GATA2 germline mutations lead to a syndrome characterized by immunodeficiency, vascular disorders and myeloid malignancies. To elucidate how these mutations affect hematopoietic homeostasis, we created a knock-in mouse model expressing the recurrent Gata2 R396Q missense mutation. Employing molecular and functional approaches, we investigated the mutation’s impact on hematopoiesis, revealing significant alterations in the hematopoietic stem and progenitor (HSPC) compartment in young age. These include increased LT-HSC numbers, reduced self-renewal potential, and impaired response to acute inflammatory stimuli. The mature HSPC compartment was primarily affected at the CMP sub-population level. In the mutant LT-HSC population, we identified an aberrant subpopulation strongly expressing CD150, resembling aging, but occurring prematurely. This population showed hyporesponsiveness, accumulated over time, and exhibited allele-specific expression (ASE) favoring the mutated Gata2 allele, also observed in GATA2 mutated patients. Our findings reveal the detrimental impact of a Gata2 recurrent missense mutation on the HSC compartment contributing to its functional decline. Defects in the CMP mature compartment, along with the inflammatory molecular signature, explain the loss of heterogeneity in HPC compartment observed in patients. Finally, our study provides a valuable model that recapitulates the ASE-related pathology observed in GATA2 deficiency, shedding light on the mechanisms contributing to the disease’s natural progression.
Journal Article
Single-nucleotide human disease mutation inactivates a blood-regenerative GATA2 enhancer
by
Zheng, Ye
,
Cao, Miao
,
Choi, Kyunghee
in
Acute myelocytic leukemia
,
Acute myeloid leukemia
,
Animal models
2019
The development and function of stem and progenitor cells that produce blood cells are vital in physiology. GATA-binding protein 2 (GATA2) mutations cause GATA-2 deficiency syndrome involving immunodeficiency, myelodysplastic syndrome, and acute myeloid leukemia. GATA-2 physiological activities necessitate that it be strictly regulated, and cell type-specific enhancers fulfill this role. The +9.5 intronic enhancer harbors multiple conserved cis-elements, and germline mutations of these cis-elements are pathogenic in humans. Since mechanisms underlying how GATA2 enhancer disease mutations impact hematopoiesis and pathology are unclear, we generated mouse models of the enhancer mutations. While a multi-motif mutant was embryonically lethal, a single-nucleotide Ets motif mutant was viable, and steady-state hematopoiesis was normal. However, the Ets motif mutation abrogated stem/progenitor cell regeneration following stress. These results reveal a new mechanism in human genetics, in which a disease predisposition mutation inactivates enhancer regenerative activity, while sparing developmental activity. Mutational sensitization to stress that instigates hematopoietic failure constitutes a paradigm for GATA-2 deficiency syndrome and other contexts of GATA-2-dependent pathogenesis.
Journal Article
Bone Marrow CD8 + Abundance Inversely Correlates with Progressive Marrow Fibrosis and Myelodysplastic Evolution in GATA2 Deficiency: Case Report
by
Sala, Simona
,
Chiarini, Marco
,
Vendemini, Francesca
in
Acute myeloid leukemia
,
Adolescent
,
Biomedical and Life Sciences
2025
Purpose
GATA2 deficiency, a rare inborn error of immunity, presents with highly variable phenotypes. Bone marrow (BM) changes such as hypocellularity and myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) are common, with hematopoietic stem cell transplantation being the only curative option due to the risk of progression to acute myeloid leukemia. Although traditional markers like cytogenetic abnormalities and somatic mutations (e.g.,
ASXL1
) identify the risk of leukemic transformation, efforts to identify novel predictors of disease evolution are needed. CD8+ T cells are known to play a key role in MDS immune surveillance, but their specific involvement in GATA2 deficiency remains poorly defined.
Methods
In this case report, we report on a young adult with GATA2 deficiency who underwent longitudinal monitoring of both peripheral and BM lymphocyte subsets, with a focus on CD8+ T-cell evolution in relation to MDS progression.
Results
The patient exhibited typical GATA2-deficient immune-hematological findings, including monocytopenia, B- and NK-cell deficiency, but had no history of severe infections and remained transfusion-independent. While peripheral CD8+ T-cell levels remained stable over time, a notable reduction in BM CD8+ T cells was observed in association with MDS progression.
Conclusion
Providing a long-term follow-up of one GATA2-deficient patient, we suggest that a decrease in BM CD8+ T cells may serve as an early marker of immune surveillance escape and disease progression. These findings underscore the need for further investigation into the role of BM CD8+ T cells in GATA2 deficiency and MDS evolution, potentially offering new insights for follow-up and therapeutic intervention.
Journal Article
Modeling GATA2 deficiency in mice: the R396Q mutation disrupts normal hematopoiesis
2025
GATA2 deficiency is an autosomal dominant germline disorder of immune dysfunction and bone marrow failure with a high propensity for leukemic transformation. While sequencing studies have identified several secondary mutations thought to contribute to malignancy, the mechanisms of disease progression have been difficult to identify due to a lack of disease-specific experimental models. Here, we describe a murine model of one of the most common GATA2 mutations associated with leukemic progression in GATA2 deficiency, Gata2
. While mutant mice exhibit mild defects in peripheral blood, they display significant hematopoietic abnormalities in the bone marrow, including a reduction in hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) function and intrinsic biases toward specific stem cell subsets that differ from previous models of GATA2 loss. Supporting this observation, single-cell RNA sequencing of hematopoietic progenitors revealed a loss of stemness, myeloid-bias, and indications of accelerated aging. Importantly, we show that Gata2
exerts effects early in hematopoietic development, as mutant mice generate fewer HSCs in the aorta gonad mesonephros, and fetal liver HSCs have reduced function. This reduced and altered pool of HSCs could be potential contributors to leukemic transformation in patients, and our model provides a useful tool to study the mechanisms of malignant transformation in GATA2 deficiency.
Journal Article
Haemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis caused by GATA2 deficiency: a report on three patients
2024
Background
Haemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis (HLH) is a syndrome that occurs in patients with severe systemic hyperinflammation. GATA binding protein 2 (
GATA2
) is a transcription factor and key component in haematopoiesis and stem cell biology.
Case presentation
Three patients with HLH, one with
Mycobacterium avium
infection, one with Epstein–Barr virus (EBV) infection, and one with
Mycobacterium kansasii
infection, were all subsequently found to have a defect in the
GATA2
gene through genetic testing.
Conclusions
GATA2
deficiency syndrome should be considered in patients with myelodysplastic syndrome,
nontuberculous mycobacterium
infection and HLH. In addition, the
GATA2
gene variant may be a genetic defect that could be the cause of the primary HLH. However, further studies are needed to confirm the role of
GATA2
pathogenic variants in the pathogenesis of HLH.
Journal Article
Cis-element mutated in GATA2-dependent immunodeficiency governs hematopoiesis and vascular integrity
2012
Haploinsufficiency for GATA2 causes human immunodeficiency syndromes characterized by mycobacterial infection, myelodysplasia, lymphedema, or aplastic anemia that progress to myeloid leukemia. GATA2 encodes a master regulator of hematopoiesis that is also linked to endothelial biology. Though the disease-causing mutations commonly occur in the GATA-2 DNA binding domain, we identified a patient with mycobacterial infection and myelodysplasia who had an uncharacterized heterozygous deletion in a GATA2 cis-element consisting of an E-box and a GATA motif. Targeted deletion of the equivalent murine element to yield homozygous mutant mice revealed embryonic lethality later than occurred with global Gata2 knockout, hematopoietic stem/progenitor cell depletion, and impaired vascular integrity. Heterozygous mutant mice were viable, but embryos exhibited deficits in definitive, but not primitive, hematopoietic stem/progenitor activity and reduced expression of Gata2 and its target genes. Mechanistic analysis revealed disruption of the endothelial cell transcriptome and loss of vascular integrity. Thus, the composite element disrupted in a human immunodeficiency is essential for establishment of the murine hematopoietic stem/progenitor cell compartment in the fetal liver and for essential vascular processes.
Journal Article
Lethal Influenza in Two Related Adults with Inherited GATA2 Deficiency
by
Bilbao, Cristina
,
Ferrer, José María
,
José Juan Ruiz-Hernández
in
Gene transfer
,
Genetic diversity
,
Immune response
2018
The pathogenesis of life-threatening influenza A virus (IAV) disease remains elusive, as infection is benign in most individuals. We studied two relatives who died from influenza. We Sanger sequenced GATA2 and evaluated the mutation by gene transfer, measured serum cytokine levels, and analyzed circulating T- and B-cells. Both patients (father and son, P1 and P2) died in 2011 of H1N1pdm IAV infection at the ages of 54 and 31 years, respectively. They had not suffered from severe or moderately severe infections in the last 17 (P1) and 15 years (P2). A daughter of P1 had died at 20 years from infectious complications. Low B-cell, NK- cell, and monocyte numbers and myelodysplastic syndrome led to sequence GATA2. Patients were heterozygous for a novel, hypomorphic, R396L mutation leading to haplo-insufficiency. B- and T-cell rearrangement in peripheral blood from P1 during the influenza episode showed expansion of one major clone. No T-cell receptor excision circles were detected in P1 and P3 since they were 35 and 18 years, respectively. Both patients presented an exuberant, interferon (IFN)-γ-mediated hypercytokinemia during H1N1pdm infection. No data about patients with viremia was available. Two previously reported adult GATA2-deficient patients died from severe H1N1 IAV infection; GATA2 deficiency may predispose to life-threatening influenza in adulthood. However, a role of other genetic variants involved in immune responses cannot be ruled out. Patients with GATA2 deficiency can reach young adulthood without severe infections, including influenza, despite long-lasting complete B-cell and natural killer (NK) cell deficiency, as well as profoundly diminished T-cell thymic output.
Journal Article
Pathogenic human variant that dislocates GATA2 zinc fingers disrupts hematopoietic gene expression and signaling networks
by
Shen, Siqi
,
Katsumura, Koichi R.
,
Low, Jason K.K.
in
Analysis
,
Biomedical research
,
Bone marrow
2023
Although certain human genetic variants are conspicuously loss of function, decoding the impact of many variants is challenging. Previously, we described a patient with leukemia predisposition syndrome (GATA2 deficiency) with a germline GATA2 variant that inserts 9 amino acids between the 2 zinc fingers (9aa-Ins). Here, we conducted mechanistic analyses using genomic technologies and a genetic rescue system with Gata2 enhancer-mutant hematopoietic progenitor cells to compare how GATA2 and 9aa-Ins function genome-wide. Despite nuclear localization, 9aa-Ins was severely defective in occupying and remodeling chromatin and regulating transcription. Variation of the inter-zinc finger spacer length revealed that insertions were more deleterious to activation than repression. GATA2 deficiency generated a lineage-diverting gene expression program and a hematopoiesis-disrupting signaling network in progenitors with reduced granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) and elevated IL-6 signaling. As insufficient GM-CSF signaling caused pulmonary alveolar proteinosis and excessive IL-6 signaling promoted bone marrow failure and GATA2 deficiency patient phenotypes, these results provide insight into mechanisms underlying GATA2-linked pathologies.
Journal Article
NR4A1 retards adipocyte differentiation or maturation via enhancing GATA2 and p53 expression
by
Qin, Dan‐dan
,
Yang, Ying‐feng
,
Liu, Yuan‐tao
in
3T3-L1 Cells
,
Adipocytes - cytology
,
Adipocytes - metabolism
2018
Nuclear receptor subfamily 4 group A member 1 (NR4A1) is an orphan nuclear receptor with diverse functions. It has been reported that NR4A1, as a transcriptional activator, is implicated in glucose and lipid metabolism. The aim of this study was to investigate the regulatory role of NR4A1 in adipogenesis and explore the underlying mechanisms. Quantitative real‐time PCR and Western blotting were used to analyse the expression of genes involved in synthesis and mobilization of fats in vivo and in vitro. Dual‐luciferase reporter assay was conducted to study the regulatory mechanisms of NR4A1. Our data from in vivo study confirmed that NR4A1 knockout (KO) mice fed with high‐fat diet were more prone to obesity, and gene expression levels of PPARγ and FAS were increased in KO mice compared to controls; our data from in vitro study showed that NR4A1 overexpression in 3T3‐L1 pre‐adipocytes inhibited adipogenesis. Moreover, NR4A1 enhanced GATA binding protein 2 (GATA2) expression, which in turn inhibited peroxisome proliferator‐activated receptor γ (PPARγ); NR4A1 inhibited sterol regulatory element binding transcription factor 1 (SREBP1) and its downstream gene fatty acid synthase (FAS) by up‐regulating p53. NR4A1 inhibits the differentiation and lipid accumulation of adipocytes by enhancing the expression of GATA2 and p53.
Journal Article