Rapid redistribution and extensive co-binding of NANOG and GATA6 at shared regulatory elements underlie specification of divergent cell fates [CUT&TAG, CUT&RUN]
Ontology highlight
ABSTRACT: Establishment of divergent cell types from a common progenitor requires transcription factors (TFs) to promote lineage-restricted transcriptional programs while suppressing alternative fates. In the mouse blastocyst, cells of the inner cell mass (ICM) coexpress NANOG and GATA6, two TFs that drive the bifurcation of these progenitors into either the epiblast (Epi) or the primitive endoderm (PrE), respectively. Here, using in vitro differentiation, we describe the molecular mechanisms of how GATA6 quickly induces the PrE fate while repressing the Epi lineage. GATA6 functions as a pioneer TF by inducing nucleosome repositioning at regulatory elements controlling PrE genes, making them accessible for deposition of active histone marks and leading to rewiring of chromatin interactions and ultimately transcriptional activation. GATA6 also binds most regulatory elements of Epi genes followed by eviction of the Epi-specific TFs NANOG and SOX2, loss of active histone marks, and reduction in chromatin accessibility that culminates in transcriptional repression. Unexpectedly, evicted NANOG and SOX2 transiently bind PrE regulatory elements occupied by GATA6. Our study shows that GATA6 binds and modulate the same regulatory elements as Epi TFs, a phenomenon we also validated in blastocysts. We propose that the ability of PrE and Epi-specific TFs to extensively bind and regulate the same gene networks contributes to ICM plasticity and allows rapid cell lineage specification by coordinating both activation and repression of divergent transcriptional programs.
Project description:Establishment of divergent cell types from a common progenitor requires transcription factors (TFs) to promote lineage-restricted transcriptional programs while suppressing alternative fates. In the mouse blastocyst, cells of the inner cell mass (ICM) coexpress NANOG and GATA6, two TFs that drive the bifurcation of these progenitors into either the epiblast (Epi) or the primitive endoderm (PrE), respectively. Here, using in vitro differentiation, we describe the molecular mechanisms of how GATA6 quickly induces the PrE fate while repressing the Epi lineage. GATA6 functions as a pioneer TF by inducing nucleosome repositioning at regulatory elements controlling PrE genes, making them accessible for deposition of active histone marks and leading to rewiring of chromatin interactions and ultimately transcriptional activation. GATA6 also binds most regulatory elements of Epi genes followed by eviction of the Epi-specific TFs NANOG and SOX2, loss of active histone marks, and reduction in chromatin accessibility that culminates in transcriptional repression. Unexpectedly, evicted NANOG and SOX2 transiently bind PrE regulatory elements occupied by GATA6. Our study shows that GATA6 binds and modulate the same regulatory elements as Epi TFs, a phenomenon we also validated in blastocysts. We propose that the ability of PrE and Epi-specific TFs to extensively bind and regulate the same gene networks contributes to ICM plasticity and allows rapid cell lineage specification by coordinating both activation and repression of divergent transcriptional programs.
Project description:Establishment of divergent cell types from a common progenitor requires transcription factors (TFs) to promote lineage-restricted transcriptional programs while suppressing alternative fates. In the mouse blastocyst, cells of the inner cell mass (ICM) coexpress NANOG and GATA6, two TFs that drive the bifurcation of these progenitors into either the epiblast (Epi) or the primitive endoderm (PrE), respectively. Here, using in vitro differentiation, we describe the molecular mechanisms of how GATA6 quickly induces the PrE fate while repressing the Epi lineage. GATA6 functions as a pioneer TF by inducing nucleosome repositioning at regulatory elements controlling PrE genes, making them accessible for deposition of active histone marks and leading to rewiring of chromatin interactions and ultimately transcriptional activation. GATA6 also binds most regulatory elements of Epi genes followed by eviction of the Epi-specific TFs NANOG and SOX2, loss of active histone marks, and reduction in chromatin accessibility that culminates in transcriptional repression. Unexpectedly, evicted NANOG and SOX2 transiently bind PrE regulatory elements occupied by GATA6. Our study shows that GATA6 binds and modulate the same regulatory elements as Epi TFs, a phenomenon we also validated in blastocysts. We propose that the ability of PrE and Epi-specific TFs to extensively bind and regulate the same gene networks contributes to ICM plasticity and allows rapid cell lineage specification by coordinating both activation and repression of divergent transcriptional programs.
Project description:Establishment of divergent cell types from a common progenitor requires transcription factors (TFs) to promote lineage-restricted transcriptional programs while suppressing alternative fates. In the mouse blastocyst, cells of the inner cell mass (ICM) coexpress NANOG and GATA6, two TFs that drive the bifurcation of these progenitors into either the epiblast (Epi) or the primitive endoderm (PrE), respectively. Here, using in vitro differentiation, we describe the molecular mechanisms of how GATA6 quickly induces the PrE fate while repressing the Epi lineage. GATA6 functions as a pioneer TF by inducing nucleosome repositioning at regulatory elements controlling PrE genes, making them accessible for deposition of active histone marks and leading to rewiring of chromatin interactions and ultimately transcriptional activation. GATA6 also binds most regulatory elements of Epi genes followed by eviction of the Epi-specific TFs NANOG and SOX2, loss of active histone marks, and reduction in chromatin accessibility that culminates in transcriptional repression. Unexpectedly, evicted NANOG and SOX2 transiently bind PrE regulatory elements occupied by GATA6. Our study shows that GATA6 binds and modulate the same regulatory elements as Epi TFs, a phenomenon we also validated in blastocysts. We propose that the ability of PrE and Epi-specific TFs to extensively bind and regulate the same gene networks contributes to ICM plasticity and allows rapid cell lineage specification by coordinating both activation and repression of divergent transcriptional programs.
Project description:Establishment of divergent cell types from a common progenitor requires transcription factors (TFs) to promote lineage-restricted transcriptional programs while suppressing alternative fates. In the mouse blastocyst, cells of the inner cell mass (ICM) coexpress NANOG and GATA6, two TFs that drive the bifurcation of these progenitors into either the epiblast (Epi) or the primitive endoderm (PrE), respectively. Here, using in vitro differentiation, we describe the molecular mechanisms of how GATA6 quickly induces the PrE fate while repressing the Epi lineage. GATA6 functions as a pioneer TF by inducing nucleosome repositioning at regulatory elements controlling PrE genes, making them accessible for deposition of active histone marks and leading to rewiring of chromatin interactions and ultimately transcriptional activation. GATA6 also binds most regulatory elements of Epi genes followed by eviction of the Epi-specific TFs NANOG and SOX2, loss of active histone marks, and reduction in chromatin accessibility that culminates in transcriptional repression. Unexpectedly, evicted NANOG and SOX2 transiently bind PrE regulatory elements occupied by GATA6. Our study shows that GATA6 binds and modulate the same regulatory elements as Epi TFs, a phenomenon we also validated in blastocysts. We propose that the ability of PrE and Epi-specific TFs to extensively bind and regulate the same gene networks contributes to ICM plasticity and allows rapid cell lineage specification by coordinating both activation and repression of divergent transcriptional programs.
Project description:Establishment of divergent cell types from a common progenitor requires transcription factors (TFs) to promote lineage-restricted transcriptional programs while suppressing alternative fates. In the mouse blastocyst, cells of the inner cell mass (ICM) coexpress NANOG and GATA6, two TFs that drive the bifurcation of these progenitors into either the epiblast (Epi) or the primitive endoderm (PrE), respectively. Here, using in vitro differentiation, we describe the molecular mechanisms of how GATA6 quickly induces the PrE fate while repressing the Epi lineage. GATA6 functions as a pioneer TF by inducing nucleosome repositioning at regulatory elements controlling PrE genes, making them accessible for deposition of active histone marks and leading to rewiring of chromatin interactions and ultimately transcriptional activation. GATA6 also binds most regulatory elements of Epi genes followed by eviction of the Epi-specific TFs NANOG and SOX2, loss of active histone marks, and reduction in chromatin accessibility that culminates in transcriptional repression. Unexpectedly, evicted NANOG and SOX2 transiently bind PrE regulatory elements occupied by GATA6. Our study shows that GATA6 binds and modulate the same regulatory elements as Epi TFs, a phenomenon we also validated in blastocysts. We propose that the ability of PrE and Epi-specific TFs to extensively bind and regulate the same gene networks contributes to ICM plasticity and allows rapid cell lineage specification by coordinating both activation and repression of divergent transcriptional programs.
Project description:The inner cell mass (ICM) of early mouse embryos is specified into Epiblast (Epi) and primitive endoderm (PrE) lineages during blastocyst formation. The antagonistic transcription factors (TFs) NANOG and GATA6 in combination with FGF/ERK signaling are central actors in ICM fate choice. However, what initiates the specification of the bipotent ICM progenitor and whether other factors are involved in this process is not fully understood yet. Here, we report the key role of PI3K in mouse ICM progenitors specification. Surprisingly, while the PI3K/AKT signaling pathway is known for almost two decades to participate to the maintenance of pluripotency in stem cells, no role for this pathway in ICM cell fate decisions has been reported so far. This is likely due to the dynamic and asynchronous nature of ICM specification combined with the pleiotropic and rapidly evolving functions mediated by PI3K/AKT. By limiting the perturbations of the pathway to a short time-window corresponding to the early phase of ICM specification, we unravelled a dual role of PI3K in ICM progenitor, being required on the one hand for the maintenance of pluripotency TFs and, on the other hand, for the competence to engage into PrE differentiation in response to FGF signaling. Thus, our work identifies PI3K as a novel critical regulator of ICM progenitor specification in the mouse embryo.
Project description:The inner cell mass (ICM) of early mouse embryos is specified into Epiblast (Epi) and primitive endoderm (PrE) lineages during blastocyst formation. The antagonistic transcription factors (TFs) NANOG and GATA6 in combination with FGF/ERK signaling are central actors in ICM fate choice. However, what initiates the specification of the bipotent ICM progenitor and whether other factors are involved in this process is not fully understood yet. Here, we report the key role of PI3K in mouse ICM progenitors specification. Surprisingly, while the PI3K/AKT signaling pathway is known for almost two decades to participate to the maintenance of pluripotency in stem cells, no role for this pathway in ICM cell fate decisions has been reported so far. This is likely due to the dynamic and asynchronous nature of ICM specification combined with the pleiotropic and rapidly evolving functions mediated by PI3K/AKT. By limiting the perturbations of the pathway to a short time-window corresponding to the early phase of ICM specification, we unravelled a dual role of PI3K in ICM progenitor, being required on the one hand for the maintenance of pluripotency TFs and, on the other hand, for the competence to engage into PrE differentiation in response to FGF signaling. Thus, our work identifies PI3K as a novel critical regulator of ICM progenitor specification in the mouse embryo.
Project description:Transcriptional reactivation of the paternal X chromosome occurs in specific cells of the mouse blastocyst between E(mbryonic day)3.5 and E4.5 during pre- to peri-implantation development. While the trophectoderm (TE) and the primitive endoderm (PE) maintain Xist RNA expression and thereby imprinted silencing of genes on the Xp, the epiblast (EPI) cells within the inner cell mass (ICM) gradually downregulate Xist and undergo XCR. To identify differentially expressed genes with potential roles in the XCR process, we performed single-cell expression profiling of ICM cells of blastocysts prior (E3.5, EPI Xist+), during (E4.25, EPI Xist+/Xist-) and after (E4.5, EPI Xist-) XCR. Single cell cDNAs were then assigned to cell-type of origin using qPCR for lineage-specific marker genes (epiblast: Nanog+, PE: Gata6+, TE: Cdx2+). Cells were considered of male sex if they expressed the male marker Eif2s3y or female sex in absence of Eif2s3y and presence of Xist expression in PE cells of the same embryo. Furthermore, female E4.5 epiblast cDNAs were classified according to Xist expression as before (Xist+) or after (Xist-) downregulation during XCR.
Project description:In early mammalian development, cleavage stage blastomeres and cells of the inner cell mass (ICM) of the blastocyst co-express embryonic and extra-embryonic transcriptional determinants. Using a double protein-based reporter we identify embryonic stem cells (ESC) that co-express the extra-embryonic factor GATA6 alongside the embryonic factor SOX2 in specific conditions. Based on single cell transcriptomics we find these population resemble unsegregated ICM, exhibiting enhanced differentiation potential for endoderm while maintaining epiblast competence and suggesting they represent an ideal model to determine how GATA6 and SOX2 influence each other's DNA binding. To relate this binding to future fate, we describe a complete enhancer set in both ESCs and naïve extraembryonic endoderm stem cells and ask whether SOX2 and GATA6 recognize these elements in ICM-like ESC sub-population. Both factors support cooperative recognition in these lineages, with GATA6 bound alongside SOX2 on a fraction of pluripotency enhancers and SOX2 alongside GATA6 more extensively on endoderm enhancers. Our findings suggest that cooperative binding between these antagonistic factors both supports self-renewal and prepares progenitor cells for later differentiation
Project description:The goal of this study is elucidating the mechanisms of the primitive endoderm (PrE, founder of the yolk sac) segregates from the epiblast (EPI, founder of the foetus). Within the uterus and ex vivo, precursors of the EPI and PrE emerge in an unsorted manner in inner cell mass (ICM). Coincident with identity acquisition, the cells physically sort, resulting in PrE establishing a single layer of cells covering the cavity-facing surface of the ICM with the EPI enclosed between the PrE and polar trophectoderm. The mechanism that determines this spatial segregation between EPI and PrE is still poorly understood. To achieve this goal, we have compared mouse embryonic day (E) 3.75 ICM cells’ transcriptome profiling to other existing mouse E3.5 and E4.5 ICM cells’ RNA-seq data. We have identified the timing of EPI and PrE lineages specification and maturation and each stage- and lineage-specific genes expression profiles.