The transcription factor XBP1 is selectively required for eosinophil differentiation

SE Bettigole, R Lis, S Adoro, AH Lee, LA Spencer… - Nature …, 2015 - nature.com
SE Bettigole, R Lis, S Adoro, AH Lee, LA Spencer, PF Weller, LH Glimcher
Nature immunology, 2015nature.com
The transcription factor XBP1 has been linked to the development of highly secretory tissues
such as plasma cells and Paneth cells, yet its function in granulocyte maturation has
remained unknown. Here we discovered an unexpectedly selective and absolute
requirement for XBP1 in eosinophil differentiation without an effect on the survival of
basophils or neutrophils. Progenitors of myeloid cells and eosinophils selectively activated
the endoribonuclease IRE1α and spliced Xbp1 mRNA without inducing parallel …
Abstract
The transcription factor XBP1 has been linked to the development of highly secretory tissues such as plasma cells and Paneth cells, yet its function in granulocyte maturation has remained unknown. Here we discovered an unexpectedly selective and absolute requirement for XBP1 in eosinophil differentiation without an effect on the survival of basophils or neutrophils. Progenitors of myeloid cells and eosinophils selectively activated the endoribonuclease IRE1α and spliced Xbp1 mRNA without inducing parallel endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress signaling pathways. Without XBP1, nascent eosinophils exhibited massive defects in the post-translational maturation of key granule proteins required for survival, and these unresolvable structural defects fed back to suppress critical aspects of the transcriptional developmental program. Hence, we present evidence that granulocyte subsets can be distinguished by their differential reliance on secretory-pathway homeostasis.
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