Literature DB >> 35082446

Brahma safeguards canalization of cardiac mesoderm differentiation.

Swetansu K Hota1,2,3, Kavitha S Rao4,5, Andrew P Blair4, Ali Khalilimeybodi6, Kevin M Hu4,5, Reuben Thomas4, Kevin So4,5, Vasumathi Kameswaran4,5, Jiewei Xu4,7,8, Benjamin J Polacco4,7,8, Ravi V Desai4, Nilanjana Chatterjee9, Austin Hsu4,5, Jonathon M Muncie4, Aaron M Blotnick4,5, Sarah A B Winchester4,5, Leor S Weinberger4,10,11, Ruth Hüttenhain4,7,8, Irfan S Kathiriya4,5,12, Nevan J Krogan4,7,8, Jeffrey J Saucerman6, Benoit G Bruneau13,14,15,16.   

Abstract

Differentiation proceeds along a continuum of increasingly fate-restricted intermediates, referred to as canalization1,2. Canalization is essential for stabilizing cell fate, but the mechanisms that underlie robust canalization are unclear. Here we show that the BRG1/BRM-associated factor (BAF) chromatin-remodelling complex ATPase gene Brm safeguards cell identity during directed cardiogenesis of mouse embryonic stem cells. Despite the establishment of a well-differentiated precardiac mesoderm, Brm-/- cells predominantly became neural precursors, violating germ layer assignment. Trajectory inference showed a sudden acquisition of a non-mesodermal identity in Brm-/- cells. Mechanistically, the loss of Brm prevented de novo accessibility of primed cardiac enhancers while increasing the expression of neurogenic factor POU3F1, preventing the binding of the neural suppressor REST and shifting the composition of BRG1 complexes. The identity switch caused by the Brm mutation was overcome by increasing BMP4 levels during mesoderm induction. Mathematical modelling supports these observations and demonstrates that Brm deletion affects cell fate trajectory by modifying saddle-node bifurcations2. In the mouse embryo, Brm deletion exacerbated mesoderm-deleted Brg1-mutant phenotypes, severely compromising cardiogenesis, and reveals an in vivo role for Brm. Our results show that Brm is a compensable safeguard of the fidelity of mesoderm chromatin states, and support a model in which developmental canalization is not a rigid irreversible path, but a highly plastic trajectory.
© 2022. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Limited.

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Year:  2022        PMID: 35082446      PMCID: PMC9196993          DOI: 10.1038/s41586-021-04336-y

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nature        ISSN: 0028-0836            Impact factor:   69.504


  57 in total

1.  Heterozygous missense mutations in SMARCA2 cause Nicolaides-Baraitser syndrome.

Authors:  Jeroen K J Van Houdt; Beata Anna Nowakowska; Sérgio B Sousa; Barbera D C van Schaik; Eve Seuntjens; Nelson Avonce; Alejandro Sifrim; Omar A Abdul-Rahman; Marie-José H van den Boogaard; Armand Bottani; Marco Castori; Valérie Cormier-Daire; Matthew A Deardorff; Isabel Filges; Alan Fryer; Jean-Pierre Fryns; Simone Gana; Livia Garavelli; Gabriele Gillessen-Kaesbach; Bryan D Hall; Denise Horn; Danny Huylebroeck; Jakub Klapecki; Malgorzata Krajewska-Walasek; Alma Kuechler; Matthew A Lines; Saskia Maas; Kay D Macdermot; Shane McKee; Alex Magee; Stella A de Man; Yves Moreau; Fanny Morice-Picard; Ewa Obersztyn; Jacek Pilch; Elizabeth Rosser; Nora Shannon; Irene Stolte-Dijkstra; Patrick Van Dijck; Catheline Vilain; Annick Vogels; Emma Wakeling; Dagmar Wieczorek; Louise Wilson; Orsetta Zuffardi; Antoine H C van Kampen; Koenraad Devriendt; Raoul Hennekam; Joris Robert Vermeesch
Journal:  Nat Genet       Date:  2012-02-26       Impact factor: 38.330

2.  Single-cell reconstruction of developmental trajectories during zebrafish embryogenesis.

Authors:  Jeffrey A Farrell; Yiqun Wang; Samantha J Riesenfeld; Karthik Shekhar; Aviv Regev; Alexander F Schier
Journal:  Science       Date:  2018-04-26       Impact factor: 47.728

3.  Mutations affecting components of the SWI/SNF complex cause Coffin-Siris syndrome.

Authors:  Yoshinori Tsurusaki; Nobuhiko Okamoto; Hirofumi Ohashi; Tomoki Kosho; Yoko Imai; Yumiko Hibi-Ko; Tadashi Kaname; Kenji Naritomi; Hiroshi Kawame; Keiko Wakui; Yoshimitsu Fukushima; Tomomi Homma; Mitsuhiro Kato; Yoko Hiraki; Takanori Yamagata; Shoji Yano; Seiji Mizuno; Satoru Sakazume; Takuma Ishii; Toshiro Nagai; Masaaki Shiina; Kazuhiro Ogata; Tohru Ohta; Norio Niikawa; Satoko Miyatake; Ippei Okada; Takeshi Mizuguchi; Hiroshi Doi; Hirotomo Saitsu; Noriko Miyake; Naomichi Matsumoto
Journal:  Nat Genet       Date:  2012-03-18       Impact factor: 38.330

Review 4.  Diverse compositions and functions of chromatin remodeling machines in cancer.

Authors:  Cigall Kadoch
Journal:  Sci Transl Med       Date:  2019-07-17       Impact factor: 17.956

Review 5.  Bistability, bifurcations, and Waddington's epigenetic landscape.

Authors:  James E Ferrell
Journal:  Curr Biol       Date:  2012-06-05       Impact factor: 10.834

6.  Functional epigenetics approach identifies BRM/SMARCA2 as a critical synthetic lethal target in BRG1-deficient cancers.

Authors:  Gregory R Hoffman; Rami Rahal; Frank Buxton; Kay Xiang; Gregory McAllister; Elizabeth Frias; Linda Bagdasarian; Janina Huber; Alicia Lindeman; Dongshu Chen; Rodrigo Romero; Nadire Ramadan; Tanushree Phadke; Kristy Haas; Mariela Jaskelioff; Boris G Wilson; Matthew J Meyer; Veronica Saenz-Vash; Huili Zhai; Vic E Myer; Jeffery A Porter; Nicholas Keen; Margaret E McLaughlin; Craig Mickanin; Charles W M Roberts; Frank Stegmeier; Zainab Jagani
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2014-02-11       Impact factor: 11.205

7.  Combined gene dosage requirement for SWI/SNF catalytic subunits during early mammalian development.

Authors:  Stephanie L Smith-Roe; Scott J Bultman
Journal:  Mamm Genome       Date:  2012-10-18       Impact factor: 2.957

8.  Altered control of cellular proliferation in the absence of mammalian brahma (SNF2alpha).

Authors:  J C Reyes; J Barra; C Muchardt; A Camus; C Babinet; M Yaniv
Journal:  EMBO J       Date:  1998-12-01       Impact factor: 11.598

9.  BRG1 and BRM SWI/SNF ATPases redundantly maintain cardiomyocyte homeostasis by regulating cardiomyocyte mitophagy and mitochondrial dynamics in vivo.

Authors:  Scott J Bultman; Darcy Wood Holley; Gustaaf G de Ridder; Salvatore V Pizzo; Tatiana N Sidorova; Katherine T Murray; Brian C Jensen; Zhongjing Wang; Ariana Bevilacqua; Xin Chen; Megan T Quintana; Manasi Tannu; Gary B Rosson; Kumar Pandya; Monte S Willis
Journal:  Cardiovasc Pathol       Date:  2016-03-04       Impact factor: 2.185

10.  PAGA: graph abstraction reconciles clustering with trajectory inference through a topology preserving map of single cells.

Authors:  F Alexander Wolf; Fiona K Hamey; Mireya Plass; Jordi Solana; Joakim S Dahlin; Berthold Göttgens; Nikolaus Rajewsky; Lukas Simon; Fabian J Theis
Journal:  Genome Biol       Date:  2019-03-19       Impact factor: 13.583

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  3 in total

Review 1.  Generating specificity in genome regulation through transcription factor sensitivity to chromatin.

Authors:  Luke Isbel; Ralph S Grand; Dirk Schübeler
Journal:  Nat Rev Genet       Date:  2022-07-12       Impact factor: 59.581

2.  Comprehensive assessment of differential ChIP-seq tools guides optimal algorithm selection.

Authors:  Thomas Eder; Florian Grebien
Journal:  Genome Biol       Date:  2022-05-24       Impact factor: 17.906

3.  CHD4 is recruited by GATA4 and NKX2-5 to repress noncardiac gene programs in the developing heart.

Authors:  Zachary L Robbe; Wei Shi; Lauren K Wasson; Angel P Scialdone; Caralynn M Wilczewski; Xinlei Sheng; Austin J Hepperla; Brynn N Akerberg; William T Pu; Ileana M Cristea; Ian J Davis; Frank L Conlon
Journal:  Genes Dev       Date:  2022-04-21       Impact factor: 12.890

  3 in total

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