| Literature DB >> 35803225 |
Hanwen Yu1, Manqi Chen1, Yuanlang Hu2, Songbang Ou3, Xiu Yu1, Shiqi Liang1, Niannian Li4, Mingzhu Yang1, Xuhui Kong1, Chuanbo Sun5, Shiqi Jia6, Qingxue Zhang3, Lin Liu4, Laurence D Hurst7, Ruiqi Li8, Wenjun Wang9, Jichang Wang10.
Abstract
Reprogramming of H3K9me3-dependent heterochromatin is required for early development. How H3K9me3 is involved in early human development remains, however, largely unclear. Here, we resolve the temporal landscape of H3K9me3 during human preimplantation development and its regulation for diverse hominoid-specific retrotransposons. At the 8-cell stage, H3K9me3 reprogramming at hominoid-specific retrotransposons termed SINE-VNTR-Alu (SVA) facilitates interaction between certain promoters and SVA-derived enhancers, promoting the zygotic genome activation. In trophectoderm, de novo H3K9me3 domains prevent pluripotent transcription factors from binding to hominoid-specific retrotransposons-derived regulatory elements for inner cell mass (ICM)-specific genes. H3K9me3 re-establishment at SVA elements in the ICM is associated with higher transcription of DNA repair genes, when compared with naive human pluripotent stem cells. Our data demonstrate that species-specific reorganization of H3K9me3-dependent heterochromatin at hominoid-specific retrotransposons plays important roles during early human development, shedding light on how the epigenetic regulation for early development has evolved in mammals.Entities:
Keywords: H3K9me3; LINE1; SVA; early human development; heterochromatin; inner cell mass; naive pluripotent; retrotransposon; trophectoderm; zygotic genome activation
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35803225 DOI: 10.1016/j.stem.2022.06.006
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Stem Cell ISSN: 1875-9777 Impact factor: 25.269