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result(s) for
"Drouin, Jacques"
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Pioneer factors as master regulators of the epigenome and cell fate
2022
Pioneer factors are transcription factors with the unique ability to initiate opening of closed chromatin. The stability of cell identity relies on robust mechanisms that maintain the epigenome and chromatin accessibility to transcription factors. Pioneer factors counter these mechanisms to implement new cell fates through binding of DNA target sites in closed chromatin and introduction of active-chromatin histone modifications, primarily at enhancers. As master regulators of enhancer activation, pioneers are thus crucial for the implementation of correct cell fate decisions in development, and as such, they hold tremendous potential for therapy through cellular reprogramming. The power of pioneer factors to reshape the epigenome also presents an Achilles heel, as their misexpression has major pathological consequences, such as in cancer. In this Review, we discuss the emerging mechanisms of pioneer factor functions and their roles in cell fate specification, cellular reprogramming and cancer.Pioneer transcription factors activate gene enhancers through their unique ability to initiate opening of inaccessible chromatin. Pioneer factors are crucial for cell fate determination in development and for cellular reprogramming, and their misexpression has major pathological consequences in cancer.
Journal Article
Pioneer factor Pax7 deploys a stable enhancer repertoire for specification of cell fate
2018
Pioneer transcription factors establish new cell-fate competence by triggering chromatin remodeling. However, many features of pioneer action, such as their kinetics and stability, remain poorly defined. Here, we show that Pax7, by opening a unique repertoire of enhancers, is necessary and sufficient for specification of one pituitary lineage. Pax7 binds its targeted enhancers rapidly, but chromatin remodeling and gene activation are slower. Enhancers opened by Pax7 show a loss of DNA methylation and acquire stable epigenetic memory, as evidenced by binding of nonpioneer factors after Pax7 withdrawal. This work shows that transient Pax7 expression is sufficient for stable specification of cell identity.
Analysis of Pax7 dynamics during pituitary lineage specification shows that Pax7 binds rapidly at uniquely marked heterochromatin pioneer sites and initiates chromatin opening that remains stable after Pax7 withdrawal, with loss of DNA hypermethylation at pioneered enhancers.
Journal Article
Pioneer and nonpioneer factor cooperation drives lineage specific chromatin opening
2019
Pioneer transcription factors are characterized by having the unique property of enabling the opening of closed chromatin sites, for implementation of cell fates. We previously found that the pioneer Pax7 specifies melanotrope cells through deployment of an enhancer repertoire, which allows binding of Tpit, a nonpioneer factor that determines the related lineages of melanotropes and corticotropes. Here, we investigate the relation between these two factors in the pioneer mechanism. Cell-specific gene expression and chromatin landscapes are defined by scRNAseq and chromatin accessibility profiling. We find that in vivo deployment of the melanotrope enhancer repertoire and chromatin opening requires both Pax7 and Tpit. In cells, binding of heterochromatin targets by Pax7 is independent of Tpit but Pax7-dependent chromatin opening requires Tpit. The present work shows that pioneer core properties are limited to the ability to recognize heterochromatin targets and facilitate nonpioneer binding. Chromatin opening per se may be provided through cooperation with nonpioneer factors.
Pioneer transcription factor Pax7 specifies melanotrope cells, which then allows for the binding of Tpit transcription factor. Here, authors find that while binding of heterochromatin targeting by Pax7 is independent of Tpit, Pax7-dependent chromatin opening requires Tpit.
Journal Article
Control of mouse limb initiation and antero-posterior patterning by Meis transcription factors
2021
Meis1 and Meis2 are homeodomain transcription factors that regulate organogenesis through cooperation with Hox proteins. Elimination of Meis genes after limb induction has shown their role in limb proximo-distal patterning; however, limb development in the complete absence of Meis function has not been studied. Here, we report that
Meis1
/
2
inactivation in the lateral plate mesoderm of mouse embryos leads to limb agenesis. Meis and Tbx factors converge in this function, extensively co-binding with Tbx to genomic sites and co-regulating enhancers of
Fgf10
, a critical factor in limb initiation. Limbs with three deleted Meis alleles show proximal-specific skeletal hypoplasia and agenesis of posterior skeletal elements. This failure in posterior specification results from an early role of Meis factors in establishing the limb antero-posterior prepattern required for
Shh
activation. Our results demonstrate roles for Meis transcription factors in early limb development and identify their involvement in previously undescribed interaction networks that regulate organogenesis.
Double conditional knockout of
Meis1/2
in the limb forming region of mouse embryos results in the complete absence of limb, while embryos developed with one functional
Meis
allele, so identifying the role of Meis in antero-posterior and proximo-distal patterning.
Journal Article
Pituitary cell translation and secretory capacities are enhanced cell autonomously by the transcription factor Creb3l2
2019
Translation is a basic cellular process and its capacity is adapted to cell function. In particular, secretory cells achieve high protein synthesis levels without triggering the protein stress response. It is unknown how and when translation capacity is increased during differentiation. Here, we show that the transcription factor Creb3l2 is a scaling factor for translation capacity in pituitary secretory cells and that it directly binds ~75% of regulatory and effector genes for translation. In parallel with this cell-autonomous mechanism, implementation of the physiological UPR pathway prevents triggering the protein stress response. Knockout mice for
Tpit
, a pituitary differentiation factor, show that Creb3l2 expression and its downstream regulatory network are dependent on
Tpit
. Further, Creb3l2 acts by direct targeting of translation effector genes in parallel with signaling pathways that otherwise regulate protein synthesis. Expression of Creb3l2 may be a useful means to enhance production of therapeutic proteins.
Pituitary POMC secreting cells achieve high hormone expression levels after birth but the mechanism for this regulation is unclear. Here, the authors show that this process is driven cell autonomously by the differentiation factor Tpit that activates the bZIP transcription factors Creb3l2 and XBP1 to enhance translation and secretory capacities.
Journal Article
HOX13-dependent chromatin accessibility underlies the transition towards the digit development program
2020
Hox
genes encode transcription factors (TFs) that establish morphological diversity in the developing embryo. The similar DNA-binding motifs of the various HOX TFs contrast with the wide-range of HOX-dependent genetic programs. The influence of the chromatin context on HOX binding specificity remains elusive. Here, we used the developing limb as a model system to compare the binding specificity of HOXA13 and HOXD13 (HOX13 hereafter), which are required for digit formation, and HOXA11, involved in forearm/leg development. We find that upon ectopic expression in distal limb buds, HOXA11 binds sites normally HOX13-specific. Importantly, these sites are loci whose chromatin accessibility relies on HOX13. Moreover, we show that chromatin accessibility specific to the distal limb requires HOX13 function. Based on these results, we propose that HOX13 TFs pioneer the distal limb-specific chromatin accessibility landscape for the proper implementation of the distal limb developmental program.
Pioneer factors direct cell fate through switching inaccessible chromatin to an accessible state at specific target enhancers. Here the authors show that HOX13 transcription factors have a pioneer activity which is required for the proper implementation of the distal limb developmental program.
Journal Article
The role of Pitx2 and Pitx3 in muscle stem cells gives new insights into P38α MAP kinase and redox regulation of muscle regeneration
by
Buckingham, Margaret
,
Commère, Pierre-Henri
,
Friguet, Bertrand
in
Acetylcysteine
,
Acetylcysteine - administration & dosage
,
Animal models
2018
Skeletal muscle regeneration depends on satellite cells. After injury these muscle stem cells exit quiescence, proliferate and differentiate to regenerate damaged fibres. We show that this progression is accompanied by metabolic changes leading to increased production of reactive oxygen species (ROS). Using Pitx2/3 single and double mutant mice that provide genetic models of deregulated redox states, we demonstrate that moderate overproduction of ROS results in premature differentiation of satellite cells while high levels lead to their senescence and regenerative failure. Using the ROS scavenger, N-Acetyl-Cysteine (NAC), in primary cultures we show that a physiological increase in ROS is required for satellite cells to exit the cell cycle and initiate differentiation through the redox activation of p38α MAP kinase. Subjecting cultured satellite cells to transient inhibition of P38α MAP kinase in conjunction with NAC treatment leads to their rapid expansion, with striking improvement of their regenerative potential in grafting experiments.
Journal Article
O-GlcNAcylation of FOXK1 co-opts BAP1 to orchestrate the E2F pathway and promotes oncogenesis
2025
The E2F transcription factors constitute a core transcriptional network that governs cell division and oncogenesis in multi-cellular organisms, although their molecular mechanisms remain incompletely understood. Here, we show that elevated expression of the transcription factor FOXK1 promotes transcription of E2F target genes and cellular transformation. High expression of FOXK1 in patient tumors is also strongly correlated with E2F gene expression. Mechanistically, we demonstrate that FOXK1 is O-GlcNAcylated, and loss of this modification impairs FOXK1 ability to promote cell proliferation and tumor growth. We also show that expression of FOXK1 O-GlcNAcylation-defective mutants results in reduced recruitment of the H2AK119 deubiquitinase and tumor suppressor BAP1 to E2F target genes. This event is associated with a transcriptional repressive chromatin environment and reduced cell proliferation. Our results define an essential role of FOXK1 O-GlcNAcylation in co-opting the tumor suppressor BAP1 to promote cancer cell progression through orchestration of the E2F pathway.
The regulation of the E2F pathway remains incompletely established. Here the authors find that the O-GlcNAcylated FOXK1 associates with the deubiquitinase BAP1 to upregulate transcription of E2F target genes and promote cancer progression.
Journal Article
Specificity of Pitx3-Dependent Gene Regulatory Networks in Subsets of Midbrain Dopamine Neurons
by
Balsalobre, Aurelio
,
Drouin, Jacques
,
Bifsha, Panojot
in
Animals
,
Biomedical and Life Sciences
,
Biomedicine
2017
Dysfunction of midbrain dopaminergic (mDA) neurons is involved in Parkinson’s disease (PD) and neuropsychiatric disorders. Pitx3 is expressed in mDA neuron subsets of the substantia nigra compacta (SNc) and of the ventral tegmental area (VTA) that are degeneration-sensitive in PD. The genetic network(s) and mode(s) of action of Pitx3 in these mDA neurons remain poorly characterized. We hypothesized that, given their distinct neuronal identities, Pitx3-expressing neurons of SNc and VTA should differ in their Pitx3-controlled gene expression networks and this may involve subset-specific co-regulators. Expression profiling of purified mDA neuronal subsets indicates that Pitx3 regulates different sets of genes in SNc and VTA, such as activating the expression of primary cilium gene products specifically in VTA neurons. Interaction network analysis pointed to the participation of differentially expressed Lhx/Lmo family members in the modulation of Pitx3 action in SNc and VTA mDA neurons. Conversely, global binding patterns of Pitx3 on genomic DNA of human dopaminergic cells revealed that Pitx3 is often co-recruited to regions that foster the formation of GATA-bHLH-BRN complexes, which usually involve Lmo co-regulatory proteins. We focused on Lmo3 for its preferential expression in SNc neurons and demonstrated that it functions as a transcriptional co-activator of Pitx3 by enhancing its activity on genomic regulatory elements. In summary, we defined the SN and VTA-specific programs of Pitx3-dependent gene expression and identified Lmo3 as a SN-specific co-regulator of Pitx3-dependent transcription.
Journal Article
Rgs6 is Required for Adult Maintenance of Dopaminergic Neurons in the Ventral Substantia Nigra
by
Yang, Jianqi
,
Fisher, Rory A.
,
Drouin, Jacques
in
Animals
,
Biology and Life Sciences
,
Dopamine
2014
Parkinson disease (PD) is characterized by the preferential, but poorly understood, vulnerability to degeneration of midbrain dopaminergic (mDA) neurons in the ventral substantia nigra compacta (vSNc). These sensitive mDA neurons express Pitx3, a transcription factor that is critical for their survival during development. We used this dependence to identify, by flow cytometry and expression profiling, the negative regulator of G-protein signaling Rgs6 for its restricted expression in these neurons. In contrast to Pitx3-/- mDA neurons that die during fetal (vSNc) or post-natal (VTA) period, the vSNc mDA neurons of Rgs6-/- mutant mice begin to exhibit unilateral signs of degeneration at around 6 months of age, and by one year cell loss is observed in a fraction of mice. Unilateral cell loss is accompanied by contralateral degenerating neurons that exhibit smaller cell size, altered morphology and reduced dendritic network. The degenerating neurons have low levels of tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) and decreased nuclear Pitx3; accordingly, expression of many Pitx3 target gene products is altered, including Vmat2, Bdnf, Aldh1a1 (Adh2) and Fgf10. These low TH neurons also express markers of increased dopamine signaling, namely increased DAT and phospho-Erk1/2 expression. The late onset degeneration may reflect the protective action of Rgs6 against excessive DA signaling throughout life. Rgs6-dependent protection is thus critical for adult survival and maintenance of the vSNc mDA neurons that are most affected in PD.
Journal Article