| Literature DB >> 30550787 |
Jiaqiang Wang1, Leyun Wang2, Guihai Feng2, Yukai Wang2, Yufei Li3, Xin Li4, Chao Liu3, Guanyi Jiao3, Cheng Huang3, Junchao Shi5, Tong Zhou5, Qi Chen5, Zhonghua Liu6, Wei Li7, Qi Zhou8.
Abstract
In early mammalian embryos, it remains unclear how the first cell fate bias is initially triggered and amplified toward cell fate segregation. Here, we report that a long noncoding RNA, LincGET, is transiently and asymmetrically expressed in the nucleus of two- to four-cell mouse embryos. Overexpression of LincGET in one of the two-cell blastomeres biases its progeny predominantly toward the inner cell mass (ICM) fate. Mechanistically, LincGET physically binds to CARM1 and promotes the nuclear localization of CARM1, which can further increase the level of H3 methylation at Arginine 26 (H3R26me), activate ICM-specific gene expression, upregulate transposons, and increase global chromatin accessibility. Simultaneous overexpression of LincGET and depletion of Carm1 no longer biased embryonic fate, indicating that the effect of LincGET in directing ICM lineage depends on CARM1. Thus, our data identify LincGET as one of the earliest known lineage regulators to bias cell fate in mammalian 2-cell embryos.Entities:
Keywords: CARM1; cell fate determination; chromatin accessibility; early embryos; long noncoding RNA
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30550787 DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2018.11.039
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell ISSN: 0092-8674 Impact factor: 41.582