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CTCF-mediated topological boundaries during development foster appropriate gene regulation
Narendra, Varun; Bulajic, Milica; Dekker, Job; Mazzoni, Esteban O; Reinberg, Danny
The genome is organized into repeating topologically associated domains (TADs), each of which is spatially isolated from its neighbor by poorly understood boundary elements thought to be conserved across cell types. Here, we show that deletion of CTCF (CCCTC-binding factor)-binding sites at TAD and sub-TAD topological boundaries that form within the HoxA and HoxC clusters during differentiation not only disturbs local chromatin domain organization and regulatory interactions but also results in homeotic transformations typical of Hox gene misregulation. Moreover, our data suggest that CTCF-dependent boundary function can be modulated by competing forces, such as the self-assembly of polycomb domains within the nucleus. Therefore, CTCF boundaries are not merely static structural components of the genome but instead are locally dynamic regulatory structures that control gene expression during development.
PMCID:5238725
PMID: 28087711
ISSN: 1549-5477
CID: 2412882
MED12 Regulates HSC-Specific Enhancers Independently of Mediator Kinase Activity to Control Hematopoiesis
Aranda-Orgilles, Beatriz; Saldana-Meyer, Ricardo; Wang, Eric; Trompouki, Eirini; Fassl, Anne; Lau, Stephanie; Mullenders, Jasper; Rocha, Pedro P; Raviram, Ramya; Guillamot, Maria; Sanchez-Diaz, Maria; Wang, Kun; Kayembe, Clarisse; Zhang, Nan; Amoasii, Leonela; Choudhuri, Avik; Skok, Jane A; Schober, Markus; Reinberg, Danny; Sicinski, Piotr; Schrewe, Heinrich; Tsirigos, Aristotelis; Zon, Leonard I; Aifantis, Iannis
Hematopoietic-specific transcription factors require coactivators to communicate with the general transcription machinery and establish transcriptional programs that maintain hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) self-renewal, promote differentiation, and prevent malignant transformation. Mediator is a large coactivator complex that bridges enhancer-localized transcription factors with promoters, but little is known about Mediator function in adult stem cell self-renewal and differentiation. We show that MED12, a member of the Mediator kinase module, is an essential regulator of HSC homeostasis, as in vivo deletion of Med12 causes rapid bone marrow aplasia leading to acute lethality. Deleting other members of the Mediator kinase module does not affect HSC function, suggesting kinase-independent roles of MED12. MED12 deletion destabilizes P300 binding at lineage-specific enhancers, resulting in H3K27Ac depletion, enhancer de-activation, and consequent loss of HSC stemness signatures. As MED12 mutations have been described recently in blood malignancies, alterations in MED12-dependent enhancer regulation may control both physiological and malignant hematopoiesis.
PMCID:5268820
PMID: 27570068
ISSN: 1875-9777
CID: 2232392
Chromatin Starts to Come Clean
Tu, Shengjiang; LeRoy, Gary; Reinberg, Danny
In an effort to identify a chromatin-associated pluripotent network, Rafiee et al., (2016) developed a powerful ChIP-MS technique and discovered a novel protein, TRIM24, enriched on OCT4-, SOX2-, and NANOG-associated chromatin, paving the way for future proteomic studies on chromatin.
PMID: 27814489
ISSN: 1097-4164
CID: 2297512
ISL1 and JMJD3 synergistically control cardiac differentiation of embryonic stem cells
Wang, Yang; Li, Yuejiao; Guo, Chen; Lu, Qin; Wang, Weiping; Jia, Zhuqing; Chen, Ping; Ma, Kangtao; Reinberg, Danny; Zhou, Chunyan
ISL1 is expressed in cardiac progenitor cells and plays critical roles in cardiac lineage differentiation and heart development. Cardiac progenitor cells hold great potential for clinical and translational applications. However, the mechanisms underlying ISL1 function in cardiac progenitor cells have not been fully elucidated. Here we uncover a hierarchical role of ISL1 in cardiac progenitor cells, showing that ISL1 directly regulates hundreds of potential downstream target genes that are implicated in cardiac differentiation, through an epigenetic mechanism. Specifically, ISL1 promotes the demethylation of tri-methylation of histone H3K27 (H3K27me3) at the enhancers of key downstream target genes, including Myocd and Mef2c, which are core cardiac transcription factors. ISL1 physically interacts with JMJD3, a H3K27me3 demethylase, and conditional depletion of JMJD3 leads to impaired cardiac progenitor cell differentiation, phenocopying that of ISL1 depletion. Interestingly, ISL1 is not only responsible for the recruitment of JMJD3 to specific target loci during cardiac progenitor differentiation, but also modulates its demethylase activity. In conclusion, ISL1 and JMJD3 partner to alter the cardiac epigenome, instructing gene expression changes that drive cardiac differentiation.
PMCID:5001586
PMID: 27105846
ISSN: 1362-4962
CID: 2080252
Co-repressor CBFA2T2 regulates pluripotency and germline development
Tu, Shengjiang; Narendra, Varun; Yamaji, Masashi; Vidal, Simon E; Rojas, Luis Alejandro; Wang, Xiaoshi; Kim, Sang Yong; Garcia, Benjamin A; Tuschl, Thomas; Stadtfeld, Matthias; Reinberg, Danny
Developmental specification of germ cells lies at the heart of inheritance, as germ cells contain all of the genetic and epigenetic information transmitted between generations. The critical developmental event distinguishing germline from somatic lineages is the differentiation of primordial germ cells (PGCs), precursors of sex-specific gametes that produce an entire organism upon fertilization. Germ cells toggle between uni- and pluripotent states as they exhibit their own 'latent' form of pluripotency. For example, PGCs express a number of transcription factors in common with embryonic stem (ES) cells, including OCT4 (encoded by Pou5f1), SOX2, NANOG and PRDM14 (refs 2, 3, 4). A biochemical mechanism by which these transcription factors converge on chromatin to produce the dramatic rearrangements underlying ES-cell- and PGC-specific transcriptional programs remains poorly understood. Here we identify a novel co-repressor protein, CBFA2T2, that regulates pluripotency and germline specification in mice. Cbfa2t2-/- mice display severe defects in PGC maturation and epigenetic reprogramming. CBFA2T2 forms a biochemical complex with PRDM14, a germline-specific transcription factor. Mechanistically, CBFA2T2 oligomerizes to form a scaffold upon which PRDM14 and OCT4 are stabilized on chromatin. Thus, in contrast to the traditional 'passenger' role of a co-repressor, CBFA2T2 functions synergistically with transcription factors at the crossroads of the fundamental developmental plasticity between uni- and pluripotency.
PMCID:4911307
PMID: 27281218
ISSN: 1476-4687
CID: 2136522
Structural basis of oncogenic histone H3K27M inhibition of human polycomb repressive complex 2
Justin, Neil; Zhang, Ying; Tarricone, Cataldo; Martin, Stephen R; Chen, Shuyang; Underwood, Elizabeth; De Marco, Valeria; Haire, Lesley F; Walker, Philip A; Reinberg, Danny; Wilson, Jon R; Gamblin, Steven J
Polycomb repressive complex 2 (PRC2) silences gene expression through trimethylation of K27 of histone H3 (H3K27me3) via its catalytic SET domain. A missense mutation in the substrate of PRC2, histone H3K27M, is associated with certain pediatric brain cancers and is linked to a global decrease of H3K27me3 in the affected cells thought to be mediated by inhibition of PRC2 activity. We present here the crystal structure of human PRC2 in complex with the inhibitory H3K27M peptide bound to the active site of the SET domain, with the methionine residue located in the pocket that normally accommodates the target lysine residue. The structure and binding studies suggest a mechanism for the oncogenic inhibition of H3K27M. The structure also reveals how binding of repressive marks, like H3K27me3, to the EED subunit of the complex leads to enhancement of the catalytic efficiency of the SET domain and thus the propagation of this repressive histone modification.
PMCID:4853476
PMID: 27121947
ISSN: 2041-1723
CID: 2092572
Epigenetic (re)programming of caste-specific behavior in the ant Camponotus floridanus
Simola, Daniel F; Graham, Riley J; Brady, Cristina M; Enzmann, Brittany L; Desplan, Claude; Ray, Anandasankar; Zwiebel, Laurence J; Bonasio, Roberto; Reinberg, Danny; Liebig, Jurgen; Berger, Shelley L
Eusocial insects organize themselves into behavioral castes whose regulation has been proposed to involve epigenetic processes, including histone modification. In the carpenter ant Camponotus floridanus, morphologically distinct worker castes called minors and majors exhibit pronounced differences in foraging and scouting behaviors. We found that these behaviors are regulated by histone acetylation likely catalyzed by the conserved acetyltransferase CBP. Transcriptome and chromatin analysis in brains of scouting minors fed pharmacological inhibitors of CBP and histone deacetylases (HDACs) revealed hundreds of genes linked to hyperacetylated regions targeted by CBP. Majors rarely forage, but injection of a HDAC inhibitor or small interfering RNAs against the HDAC Rpd3 into young major brains induced and sustained foraging in a CBP-dependent manner. Our results suggest that behavioral plasticity in animals may be regulated in an epigenetic manner via histone modification.
PMCID:5057185
PMID: 26722000
ISSN: 1095-9203
CID: 1895332
ROLE OF AUTS2 IN ETHANOL CONSUMPTION AND CHROMATIN DYNAMICS UNDERLYING NEURONAL GENE EXPRESSION [Meeting Abstract]
Stafford, JM; Lee, P; Gao, Z; Mar, A; Reinberg, D
ISI:000379814601079
ISSN: 1530-0277
CID: 2219922
Analysis of the Histone H3.1 Interactome: A Suitable Chaperone for the Right Event
Campos, Eric I; Smits, Arne H; Kang, Young-Hoon; Landry, Sebastien; Escobar, Thelma M; Nayak, Shruti; Ueberheide, Beatrix M; Durocher, Daniel; Vermeulen, Michiel; Hurwitz, Jerard; Reinberg, Danny
Despite minimal disparity at the sequence level, mammalian H3 variants bind to distinct sets of polypeptides. Although histone H3.1 predominates in cycling cells, our knowledge of the soluble complexes that it forms en route to deposition or following eviction from chromatin remains limited. Here, we provide a comprehensive analysis of the H3.1-binding proteome, with emphasis on its interactions with histone chaperones and components of the replication fork. Quantitative mass spectrometry revealed 170 protein interactions, whereas a large-scale biochemical fractionation of H3.1 and associated enzymatic activities uncovered over twenty stable protein complexes in dividing human cells. The sNASP and ASF1 chaperones play pivotal roles in the processing of soluble histones but do not associate with the active CDC45/MCM2-7/GINS (CMG) replicative helicase. We also find TONSL-MMS22L to function as a H3-H4 histone chaperone. It associates with the regulatory MCM5 subunit of the replicative helicase.
PMCID:4656108
PMID: 26527279
ISSN: 1097-4164
CID: 1825822
Cuticular Hydrocarbon Pheromones for Social Behavior and Their Coding in the Ant Antenna
Sharma, Kavita R; Enzmann, Brittany L; Schmidt, Yvonne; Moore, Dani; Jones, Graeme R; Parker, Jane; Berger, Shelley L; Reinberg, Danny; Zwiebel, Laurence J; Breit, Bernhard; Liebig, Jurgen; Ray, Anandasankar
The sophisticated organization of eusocial insect societies is largely based on the regulation of complex behaviors by hydrocarbon pheromones present on the cuticle. We used electrophysiology to investigate the detection of cuticular hydrocarbons (CHCs) by female-specific olfactory sensilla basiconica on the antenna of Camponotus floridanus ants through the utilization of one of the largest family of odorant receptors characterized so far in insects. These sensilla, each of which contains multiple olfactory receptor neurons, are differentially sensitive to CHCs and allow them to be classified into three broad groups that collectively detect every hydrocarbon tested, including queen and worker-enriched CHCs. This broad-spectrum sensitivity is conserved in a related species, Camponotus laevigatus, allowing these ants to detect CHCs from both nestmates and non-nestmates. Behavioral assays demonstrate that these ants are excellent at discriminating CHCs detected by the antenna, including enantiomers of a candidate queen pheromone that regulates the reproductive division of labor.
PMID: 26279569
ISSN: 2211-1247
CID: 1732162