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Identification of endothelial and mesenchymal FOXF1 enhancers involved in alveolar capillary dysplasia. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Mutations in the FOXF1 gene cause a lethal lung disease called Alveolar Capillary Dysplasia with Misalignment of Pulmonary Veins, particularly impacting newborns and infants.
  • The research focuses on identifying new regulatory elements upstream of FOXF1, which are linked to frequent non-coding deletions associated with the disease.
  • Through advanced techniques like multiome single-nuclei RNA and ATAC sequencing, the study uncovers four key enhancers for FOXF1 in specific cell types, revealing their role in the disease's pathology and clarifying how these deletions contribute to its development.

Article Abstract

Mutations in the FOXF1 gene, a key transcriptional regulator of pulmonary vascular development, cause Alveolar Capillary Dysplasia with Misalignment of Pulmonary Veins, a lethal lung disease affecting newborns and infants. Identification of new FOXF1 upstream regulatory elements is critical to explain why frequent non-coding FOXF1 deletions are linked to the disease. Herein, we use multiome single-nuclei RNA and ATAC sequencing of mouse and human patient lungs to identify four conserved endothelial and mesenchymal FOXF1 enhancers. We demonstrate that endothelial FOXF1 enhancers are autoactivated, whereas mesenchymal FOXF1 enhancers are regulated by EBF1 and GLI1. The cell-specificity of FOXF1 enhancers is validated by disrupting these enhancers in mouse embryonic stem cells using CRISPR/Cpf1 genome editing followed by lineage-tracing of mutant embryonic stem cells in mouse embryos using blastocyst complementation. This study resolves an important clinical question why frequent non-coding FOXF1 deletions that interfere with endothelial and mesenchymal enhancers can lead to the disease.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11187179PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-49477-6DOI Listing

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