| Literature DB >> 31431802 |
Chia-Lin Wei1, Silvia K Nicolis2, Yanfen Zhu1, Miriam Pagin2.
Abstract
In our article, we asked whether Sox2, a transcription factor important in brain development and disease, is involved in gene regulation through its action on long-range interactions between promoters and distant enhancers. Our findings highlight that Sox2 shapes a genome-wide network of promoter-enhancer interactions, acting by direct binding to these elements. Sox2 loss affects the three-dimensional (3D) genome and decreases the activity of a subset of genes involved in Sox2-bound interactions. At least one of such downregulated genes, Socs3, is critical for long-term neural stem cell maintenance. These results point to the possibility of identifying a transcriptional network downstream to Sox2, and involved in neural stem cell maintenance. In addition, interacting Sox2-bound enhancers are often connected to genes which are relevant, in man, to neurodevelopmental disease; this may facilitate the detection of functionally relevant mutations in regulatory elements in man, contributing to neural disease.Entities:
Keywords: Sox2; enhancers; long-range interactions; neural stem cells; neurodevelopmental disease
Year: 2019 PMID: 31431802 PMCID: PMC6686325 DOI: 10.1177/1179069519868224
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Exp Neurosci ISSN: 1179-0695
Figure 1.Sox2-dependent interactions: (A) promoter-enhancer and promoter-promoter interactions are depicted in wild-type (top) and Sox2-deleted (bottom) NSC. Red indicates interactions decreased in mutant cells. (B) Sox2 binding overlaps with H3K27Ac+ nucleosomes (“enhancers”). The proportion of Sox2+ enhancers in interactions is much higher than the proportion of Sox2– enhancers (see text). (C) The loss of Sox2 from enhancers involved in promoter-enhancer interactions is the major factor responsible for downregulation of the connected gene. (D) Is loss of long-range interactions in Sox2-deleted NSC rescued by re-addition of Sox2, together with long-term self-renewal?
Figure 2.Long-range Sox2-bound interactions and human-inherited neurodevelopmental disease: (A) functional enhancers connected to mouse homologs of human neural disease genes may provide a clue to the identification of mutation/polymorphism in conserved human enhancers, responsible for disease. (B) Mouse homologs of genes involved in neurodevelopmental disease in man are significantly enriched in Sox2-bound promoter-enhancer interactions. Different types of microcephaly and intellectual disability are indicated. The proportion of Sox2-bound (red) to total genes considered (blue) is indicated (see Bertolini et al,[6] Table S6). (C) Screenshots of interactions involving the PTEN-induced kinase 1 (PINK1) and Presenilin-2 (Psen2) genes, involved in Parkinson’s and Alzheimer’s disease, respectively.
Figure 3.Two models for aggregated chromatin interactions.