| Literature DB >> 31315048 |
Liang Li1, Xiangbin Ruan1, Chang Wen1, Pan Chen1, Wei Liu1, Liyuan Zhu1, Pan Xiang1, Xiaoling Zhang1, Qunfang Wei1, Lin Hou1, Bin Yin1, Jiangang Yuan1, Boqin Qiang1, Pengcheng Shu2, Xiaozhong Peng3.
Abstract
Histone methylation is essential for regulating gene expression during organogenesis to maintain stem cells and execute a proper differentiation program for their descendants. Here we show that the COMPASS family histone methyltransferase co-factor ASH2L is required for maintaining neural progenitor cells (NPCs) and the production and positioning of projection neurons during neocortex development. Specifically, loss of Ash2l in NPCs results in malformation of the neocortex; the mutant neocortex has fewer neurons, which are also abnormal in composition and laminar position. Moreover, ASH2L loss impairs trimethylation of H3K4 and the transcriptional machinery specific for Wnt-β-catenin signaling, inhibiting the proliferation ability of NPCs at late stages of neurogenesis by disrupting S phase entry to inhibit cell cycle progression. Overexpressing β-catenin after ASH2L elimination rescues the proliferation deficiency. Therefore, our findings demonstrate that ASH2L is crucial for modulating Wnt signaling to maintain NPCs and generate a full complement of neurons during mammalian neocortex development.Entities:
Keywords: ASH2L; COMPASS; H3K4me3; Wnt signaling pathway; cell cycle; corticogenesis; neurogenesis
Year: 2019 PMID: 31315048 DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2019.06.055
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Rep Impact factor: 9.423