1. Academic Validation
  2. PROTAC-mediated vimentin degradation promotes terminal erythroid differentiation of pluripotent stem cells

PROTAC-mediated vimentin degradation promotes terminal erythroid differentiation of pluripotent stem cells

  • Stem Cell Res Ther. 2024 Sep 18;15(1):310. doi: 10.1186/s13287-024-03910-1.
Hao Yan # 1 Ruge Zang # 2 Tiantian Cui 1 Yiming Liu 1 Biao Zhang 1 Lingpin Zhao 1 Hongyu Li 1 Juannian Zhou 1 Haiyang Wang 1 Quan Zeng 1 Lei Xu 1 Yuqi Zhou 1 Xuetao Pei 1 Jiafei Xi 3 Wen Yue 4
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 Beijing Institute of Radiation Medicine, Beijing, 100850, P. R. China.
  • 2 Beijing Institute of Radiation Medicine, Beijing, 100850, P. R. China. rugezang@163.com.
  • 3 Beijing Institute of Radiation Medicine, Beijing, 100850, P. R. China. xi_jiafei@126.com.
  • 4 Beijing Institute of Radiation Medicine, Beijing, 100850, P. R. China. yuewen@bmi.ac.cn.
  • # Contributed equally.
Abstract

Background: Human pluripotent stem cells (hPSCs), including human embryonic stem cells (hESCs) and induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSCs), can undergo erythroid differentiation, offering a potentially invaluable resource for generating large quantities of erythroid cells. However, the majority of erythrocytes derived from hPSCs fail to enucleate compared with those derived from cord blood progenitors, with an unknown molecular basis for this difference. The expression of vimentin (VIM) is retained in erythroid cells differentiated from hPSCs but is absent in mature erythrocytes. Further exploration is required to ascertain whether VIM plays a critical role in enucleation and to elucidate the underlying mechanisms.

Methods: In this study, we established a hESC line with reversible vimentin degradation (dTAG-VIM-H9) using the proteolysis-targeting chimera (PROTAC) platform. Various time-course studies, including erythropoiesis from CD34+ human umbilical cord blood and three-dimensional (3D) Organoid culture from hESCs, morphological analysis, quantitative Real-Time PCR (qRT-PCR), western blotting, flow cytometry, karyotyping, cytospin, Benzidine-Giemsa staining, immunofluorescence assay, and high-speed cell imaging analysis, were conducted to examine and compare the characteristics of hESCs and those with vimentin degradation, as well as their differentiated erythroid cells.

Results: Vimentin expression diminished during normal erythropoiesis in CD34+ cord blood cells, whereas it persisted in erythroid cells differentiated from hESC. Depletion of vimentin using the degradation tag (dTAG) system promotes erythroid enucleation in dTAG-VIM-H9 cells. Nuclear polarization of erythroblasts is elevated by elimination of vimentin.

Conclusions: VIM disappear during the normal maturation of erythroid cells, whereas they are retained in erythroid cells differentiated from hPSCs. We found that retention of vimentin during erythropoiesis impairs erythroid enucleation from hPSCs. Using the PROTAC platform, we validated that vimentin degradation by dTAG accelerates the enucleation rate in dTAG-VIM-H9 cells by enhancing nuclear polarization.

Keywords

Cultured RBCs; Enucleation; Erythropoiesis; PROTAC; Polarization; Vimentin.

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