Transcription factors (TFs) are indispensable for maintaining cell identity through regulating cell-specific gene expression. Distinct cell identities derived from a common progenitor are frequently perpetuated by shared TFs, yet the mechanisms that enable these TFs to regulate cell-specific targets are poorly characterized. We report that the TF NKX2.2 is critical for the identity of pancreatic islet α cells by directly activating α-cell genes and repressing alternate islet cell fate genes. When compared with the known role of NKX2.2 in islet β cells, we demonstrate that NKX2.2 regulates α-cell genes, facilitated in part by α-cell-specific DNA binding at gene promoters. Furthermore, we have identified the reprogramming factor KLF4 as having enriched expression in α cells, where it co-occupies NKX2.2-bound α-cell promoters, is necessary for NKX2.2 promoter occupancy in α cells, and coregulates many NKX2.2 α-cell transcriptional targets. Overexpression of in β cells is sufficient to manipulate chromatin accessibility, increase binding of NKX2.2 at α-cell-specific promoter sites, and alter expression of NKX2.2-regulated cell-specific targets. This study identifies KLF4 as a novel α-cell factor that cooperates with NKX2.2 to regulate α-cell identity.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/gad.352193.124 | DOI Listing |
bioRxiv
October 2024
Departments of Pathology and Cell Biology, Neuroscience, and Neurology, Center for Motor Neuron Biology and Disease, Columbia Stem Cell Initiative, Columbia University Irving Medical Center, New York, NY 10032, USA.
Human neurogenesis is disproportionately protracted, lasting >10 times longer than in mouse, allowing neural progenitors to undergo more rounds of self-renewing cell divisions and generate larger neuronal populations. In the human spinal cord, expansion of the motor neuron lineage is achieved through a newly evolved progenitor domain called vpMN (ventral motor neuron progenitor) that uniquely extends and expands motor neurogenesis. This behavior of vpMNs is controlled by transcription factor NKX2-2, which in vpMNs is co-expressed with classical motor neuron progenitor (pMN) marker OLIG2.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFClin Epigenetics
October 2024
Department of Biomedical Data Sciences, Section Molecular Epidemiology, Leiden University Medical Center, Post-zone S-05-P, P.O. Box 9600, 2300 RC, Leiden, The Netherlands.
Background: Lack of insight into factors that determine purity and quality of human iPSC (hiPSC)-derived neo-cartilage precludes applications of this powerful technology toward regenerative solutions in the clinical setting. Here, we set out to generate methylome-wide landscapes of hiPSC-derived neo-cartilages from different tissues-of-origin and integrated transcriptome-wide data to identify dissimilarities in set points of methylation with associated transcription and the respective pathways in which these genes act.
Methods: We applied in vitro chondrogenesis using hiPSCs generated from two different tissue sources: skin fibroblasts and articular cartilage.
Acta Neuropathol Commun
August 2024
Department of Pathology, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, CA, USA.
Nat Neurosci
October 2024
Departments of Pathology and Cell Biology, Neuroscience, and Neurology, Center for Motor Neuron Biology and Disease, Columbia Stem Cell Initiative, Columbia University Irving Medical Center, New York, NY, USA.
Neurogenesis lasts ~10 times longer in developing humans compared to mice, resulting in a >1,000-fold increase in the number of neurons in the CNS. To identify molecular and cellular mechanisms contributing to this difference, we studied human and mouse motor neurogenesis using a stem cell differentiation system that recapitulates species-specific scales of development. Comparison of human and mouse single-cell gene expression data identified human-specific progenitors characterized by coexpression of NKX2-2 and OLIG2 that give rise to spinal motor neurons.
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