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"Meng, Anming"
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Maternal Huluwa dictates the embryonic body axis through β-catenin in vertebrates
2018
The vertebrate body form changes from the round shape of the fertilized egg to a cylindrical shape when the body plan is established. However, it is unknown whether a maternal factor controls this body axis formation. Yan et al. identified such a maternal factor and named it Huluwa. Loss of maternal Huluwa, a transmembrane protein, in zebrafish or frog eggs resulted in embryos that lacked the body axis and were missing the head and dorsoanterior tissues. Huluwa promoted Axin degradation, likely independent of Wnt ligand–receptor signaling, to protect β-catenin from degradation and induce body axis development during embryogenesis. Science , this issue p. eaat1045 The Huluwa protein acts in the maternal Wnt/β-catenin pathway to establish the dorsal organizer of zebrafish and Xenopus embryos. The vertebrate body is formed by cell movements and shape change during embryogenesis. It remains undetermined which maternal signals govern the formation of the dorsal organizer and the body axis. We found that maternal depletion of huluwa , a previously unnamed gene, causes loss of the dorsal organizer, the head, and the body axis in zebrafish and Xenopus embryos. Huluwa protein is found on the plasma membrane of blastomeres in the future dorsal region in early zebrafish blastulas. Huluwa has strong dorsalizing and secondary axis–inducing activities, which require β-catenin but can function independent of Wnt ligand/receptor signaling. Mechanistically, Huluwa binds to and promotes the tankyrase-mediated degradation of Axin. Therefore, maternal Huluwa is an essential determinant of the dorsal organizer and body axis in vertebrate embryos.
Journal Article
Allelic reprogramming of the histone modification H3K4me3 in early mammalian development
2016
Three papers in this issue of
Nature
use highly sensitive ChIP–seq assays to describe the dynamic patterns of histone modifications during early mouse embryogenesis, showing that oocytes have a distinctive epigenome and providing insights into how the maternal gene expression program transitions to the zygotic program.
Chromatin states in embryogenesis
Genomic analysis of chromatin states in early embryos has been technically difficult, owing to the limited number of cells available for analysis. Three papers in this issue of
Nature
use highly sensitive ChIP–seq assays to describe the dynamic patterns of histone modifications during early mouse embryogenesis. Arne Klungland and colleagues find that the oocyte genome is associated with broad non-canonical domains of histone H3K4me3 which seem to function in preventing deposition of DNA methylation. Wei Xie and colleagues find that the oocyte genome is associated with broad non-canonical domains of histone H3K4me3 which overlap with domains of low DNA methylation and seem to contribute to gene silencing. Shaorong Gao and colleagues map histone H3K4me3 and H3K27me3 modifications in pre-implantation embryos and focus on the re-establishment of histone modifications during zygotic genome activation. They find that the breadth of H3K4me3 domains is highly dynamic and that H3K4me3 re-establishes rapidly on promoter regions whereas H3K27me3 is mostly absent from these regions. Taken together—and with previously published work—these studies show that the oocyte has a distinctive epigenome and provide insights into how the maternal gene expression program transitions to the zygotic program.
Histone modifications are fundamental epigenetic regulators that control many crucial cellular processes
1
. However, whether these marks can be passed on from mammalian gametes to the next generation is a long-standing question that remains unanswered. Here, by developing a highly sensitive approach, STAR ChIP–seq, we provide a panoramic view of the landscape of H3K4me3, a histone hallmark for transcription initiation
2
, from developing gametes to post-implantation embryos. We find that upon fertilization, extensive reprogramming occurs on the paternal genome, as H3K4me3 peaks are depleted in zygotes but are readily observed after major zygotic genome activation at the late two-cell stage. On the maternal genome, we unexpectedly find a non-canonical form of H3K4me3 (ncH3K4me3) in full-grown and mature oocytes, which exists as broad peaks at promoters and a large number of distal loci. Such broad H3K4me3 peaks are in contrast to the typical sharp H3K4me3 peaks restricted to CpG-rich regions of promoters. Notably, ncH3K4me3 in oocytes overlaps almost exclusively with partially methylated DNA domains. It is then inherited in pre-implantation embryos, before being erased in the late two-cell embryos, when canonical H3K4me3 starts to be established. The removal of ncH3K4me3 requires zygotic transcription but is independent of DNA replication-mediated passive dilution. Finally, downregulation of H3K4me3 in full-grown oocytes by overexpression of the H3K4me3 demethylase KDM5B is associated with defects in genome silencing. Taken together, these data unveil inheritance and highly dynamic reprogramming of the epigenome in early mammalian development.
Journal Article
LINE-1 transcription activates long-range gene expression
2024
Long interspersed nuclear element-1 (LINE-1 or L1) is a retrotransposon group that constitutes 17% of the human genome and shows variable expression across cell types. However, the control of L1 expression and its function in gene regulation are incompletely understood. Here we show that L1 transcription activates long-range gene expression. Genome-wide CRISPR–Cas9 screening using a reporter driven by the L1 5′ UTR in human cells identifies functionally diverse genes affecting L1 expression. Unexpectedly, altering L1 expression by knockout of regulatory genes impacts distant gene expression. L1s can physically contact their distal target genes, with these interactions becoming stronger upon L1 activation and weaker when L1 is silenced. Remarkably, L1s contact and activate genes essential for zygotic genome activation (ZGA), and L1 knockdown impairs ZGA, leading to developmental arrest in mouse embryos. These results characterize the regulation and function of L1 in long-range gene activation and reveal its importance in mammalian ZGA.
A CRISPR–Cas9 screen identifies genes that modulate long interspersed nuclear element-1 (LINE-1) expression in human cells. LINE-1 5′ UTRs have enhancer features and can activate long-range gene expression, including during zygotic genome activation.
Journal Article
A Golgi-derived vesicle potentiates PtdIns4P to PtdIns3P conversion for endosome fission
2021
Endosome fission is essential for cargo sorting and targeting in the endosomal system. However, whether organelles other than the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) participate in endosome fission through membrane contacts is unknown. Here, we characterize a Golgi-derived vesicle, the SEC14L2 compartment, that plays a unique role in facilitating endosome fission through ternary contacts with endosomes and the ER. Localized to the ER-mediated endosome fission site, the phosphatidylinositol transfer protein SEC14L2 promotes phosphatidylinositol 4-phosphate (PtdIns4P) to phosphatidylinositol 3-phosphate (PtdIns3P) conversion before endosome fission. In the absence of SEC14L2, endosome fission is attenuated and more enlarged endosomes arise due to endosomal accumulation of PtdIns4P and reduction in PtdIns3P. Collectively, our data suggest roles of the Golgi network in ER-associated endosome fission and a mechanism involving ER–endosome contacts in the regulation of endosomal phosphoinositide conversion.
Gong et al. uncover a role for the Golgi network in ER-associated endosome fission, showing that a Golgi-derived SEC14L2 compartment mediates ER-associated endosome fission by promoting PtdIns4P to PtdIns3P conversion.
Journal Article
Guidelines for morpholino use in zebrafish
by
Meng, Anming
,
Yelon, Deborah
,
Mochizuki, Naoki
in
Animals
,
Biology and Life Sciences
,
Danio rerio
2017
About the Authors: Didier Y. R. Stainier * E-mail: didier.stainier@mpi-bn.mpg.de (DYRS); cmoens@fredhutch.org (CBM) Affiliation: Department of Developmental Genetics, Max Planck Institute for Heart and Lung Research, Bad Nauheim, Germany ORCID http://orcid.org/0000-0002-0382-0026 Erez Raz Affiliation: Institute of Cell Biology, ZBME, University of Münster, Münster, Germany ORCID http://orcid.org/0000-0002-6347-3302 Nathan D. Lawson Affiliation: Department of Molecular, Cell, and Cancer Biology, University of Massachusetts Medical School, Worcester, Massachusetts, United States of America Stephen C. Ekker Affiliation: Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota, United States of America Rebecca D. Burdine Affiliation: Department of Molecular Biology, Princeton University, Princeton, New Jersey, United States of America Judith S. Eisen Affiliation: Institute of Neuroscience, University of Oregon, Eugene, Oregon, United States of America ORCID http://orcid.org/0000-0003-1229-1696 Philip W. Ingham Affiliations Lee Kong Chian School of Medicine, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore, The Living Systems Institute, University of Exeter, Exeter, United Kingdom Stefan Schulte-Merker Affiliation: Institute of Cardiovascular Organogenesis and Regeneration, WWU Münster, Faculty of Medicine, Münster, Germany Deborah Yelon Affiliation: Division of Biological Sciences, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, California, United States of America Brant M. Weinstein Affiliation: Division of Developmental Biology, NICHD, NIH, Bethesda, Maryland, United States of America Mary C. Mullins Affiliation: Department of Cell and Developmental Biology, University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States of America ORCID http://orcid.org/0000-0002-9979-1564 Stephen W. Wilson Affiliation: Department of Cell and Developmental Biology, University College London, London, United Kingdom ORCID http://orcid.org/0000-0002-8557-5940 Lalita Ramakrishnan Affiliation: Molecular Immunity Unit, Department of Medicine, University of Cambridge, MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology, Cambridge, United Kingdom Sharon L. Amacher Affiliation: Departments of Molecular Genetics and Biological Chemistry and Pharmacology, Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio, United States of America Stephan C. F. Neuhauss Affiliation: Institute of Molecular Life Sciences, University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland ORCID http://orcid.org/0000-0002-9615-480X Anming Meng Affiliation: School of Life Sciences, Tsinghua University, Beijing, China Naoki Mochizuki Affiliation: National Cerebral and Cardiovascular Center Research Institute, Osaka, Japan ORCID http://orcid.org/0000-0002-3938-9602 Pertti Panula Affiliation: Department of Anatomy and Neuroscience Center, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland Cecilia B. Moens * E-mail: didier.stainier@mpi-bn.mpg.de (DYRS); cmoens@fredhutch.org (CBM) Affiliation: Division of Basic Sciences, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, Seattle, Washington, United States of AmericaCitation: Stainier DYR, Raz E, Lawson ND, Ekker SC, Burdine RD, Eisen JS, et al.
Additionally, mutant alleles for many genes are now readily available through zebrafish community resource centers.
[...]MOs should be used alongside mutant(s) for the corresponding gene.
[...]a word of caution that previous publication of MOs is not a guarantee of their fidelity, particularly if a new phenotype is being described.
[...]we hope that these brief and mostly conceptual guidelines will assist scientists working with zebrafish as well as those assessing manuscripts and grant proposals based on experiments using zebrafish.
Journal Article
Sec14l3 potentiates VEGFR2 signaling to regulate zebrafish vasculogenesis
2019
Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) regulates vasculogenesis by using its tyrosine kinase receptors. However, little is known about whether Sec14-like phosphatidylinositol transfer proteins (PTP) are involved in this process. Here, we show that zebrafish
sec14l3
, one of the family members, specifically participates in artery and vein formation via regulating angioblasts and subsequent venous progenitors’ migration during vasculogenesis. Vascular defects caused by
sec14l3
depletion are partially rescued by restoration of VEGFR2 signaling at the receptor or downstream effector level. Biochemical analyses show that Sec14l3/SEC14L2 physically bind to VEGFR2 and prevent it from dephosphorylation specifically at the Y
1175
site by peri-membrane tyrosine phosphatase PTP1B, therefore potentiating VEGFR2 signaling activation. Meanwhile, Sec14l3 and SEC14L2 interact with RAB5A/4A and facilitate the formation of their GTP-bound states, which might be critical for VEGFR2 endocytic trafficking. Thus, we conclude that Sec14l3 controls vasculogenesis in zebrafish via the regulation of VEGFR2 activation.
The growth factor VEGF is known to regulate vasculogenesis but the downstream pathways activated are unclear. Here, the authors report that Sec14l3, a member of the PITP (phosphatidyl inositol transfer proteins) family regulates the formation of zebrafish vasculature by promoting VEGFR2 endocytic trafficking.
Journal Article
Organizer-derived Bmp2 is required for the formation of a correct Bmp activity gradient during embryonic development
2014
Bone morphogenetic proteins (Bmps) control dorsoventral patterning of vertebrate embryos through the establishment of a ventrodorsal gradient of the activated downstream cytoplasmic effectors Smad1/5/8. Some Bmp ligands are expressed in the ventral and lateral regions and in the organizer during gastrulation of the embryo, but it remains unclear how organizer-derived Bmps contribute to total Bmp ligand levels and to the establishment of the correct phospho-Smad1/5/8 gradient along the ventrodorsal axis. Here we demonstrate that interference with organizer-specific Bmp2b signalling in zebrafish embryos alters the phospho-Smad1/5/8 gradient throughout the ventrodorsal axis, elevates the levels of the Bmp antagonist Chordin and dorsalizes the embryos. Moreover, we show that organizer-derived Bmp2b represses
chordin
transcription in the organizer and contributes to the control of the Chordin gradient. Combining these experimental results with simulations of Bmp’s reaction-diffusion dynamics, our data indicate that organizer-produced Bmp2b is required for the establishment and maintenance of a Bmp activity gradient and for appropriate embryonic dorsoventral patterning during gastrulation.
The morphogen, Bmp, regulates differentiation of cell fates along the ventral to dorsal axis during vertebrate embryonic development. Here, Xue
et al
. show that Bmp2b produced by the organizer during early gastrulation in zebrafish embryos has a role in the establishment of an appropriate Bmp morphogen activity gradient and the correct dorsoventral patterning of the embryos.
Journal Article
Imaging mitochondrial membrane potential via concentration-dependent fluorescence lifetime changes
2025
Mitochondria are central to cellular metabolism. Various fluorescence tools have been developed for imaging the mitochondrial environment. Yet, new reporters and imaging methods for directly reading the mitochondrial status are needed for high spatial-temporal resolution imaging. Here, we introduce PK Mito Deep Red (PKMDR), a low-phototoxicity mitochondrial probe for time-lapse imaging, whose fluorescence lifetime serves as a sensitive indicator of mitochondrial membrane potential (Δψ
m
). The positively charged PKMDR accumulates within mitochondria under a higher Δψ
m
, leading to concentration-induced quenching and a measurable decrease in fluorescence lifetime. Since mitochondrial respiration primarily regulates Δψ
m
, PKMDR’s fluorescence lifetime effectively reports on the status of oxidative phosphorylation. Using PKMDR with fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy (FLIM), we visualize heterogeneous Δψ
m
across individual cells, organoids, and tissues over time. This method reliably reveals the heterogeneity between metabolically active peripheral mitochondria and relatively inactive perinuclear mitochondria in various cell types. Overall, PKMDR-FLIM is a robust tool for directly visualizing Δψ
m
with high spatiotemporal resolution.
Saimi and colleagues present PKMDR, a mitochondrial probe whose fluorescence lifetime serves as an indicator to monitor mitochondrial membrane potential and respiration dynamics with high resolution across cells and tissues.
Journal Article
Preface to the special topic on gene editing towards translation
2023
The review by Jun-Jie Gogo Liu and colleagues [1] discusses four nuclease-based gene-editing tools that can induce double-stranded DNA breaks, including meganucleases, zinc-finger nucleases (ZFN), transcription activator-like effector endonucleases (TALEN), and CRISPR-Cas; briefly introduces their structural mechanisms of targeted DNA recognition; and mainly describes CRISPR-Cas systems and their variants that have become a dominant strategy for gene editing in a broad range of applications from fundamental biology to biotechnology and biomedicine. The review by Sen Wu and co-authors [2] describes applications of gene editing in molecular breeding of farm animals by briefly introducing the development history of gene-edited farm animals, systematically discussing the progress of gene-edited farm animals with aspects of production performance improvement, disease resistance, bioreactor, animal welfare, and environmental friendliness, and providing their insights regarding the safety and supervision of gene-edited farm animals. [...]the research article by Caixia Gao and colleagues [6] establishes a new and rapid genome editing evaluation method in plants using Agrobacterium infiltration techniques to enable broad-spectrum, simplistic, and precise assessments of genome editing efficiencies, which may further expedite the development of genome-edited agricultural crops.
Journal Article
A Huluwa phosphorylation switch regulates embryonic axis induction
2024
Embryonic axis formation is essential for patterning and morphogenesis in vertebrates and is tightly regulated by the dorsal organizer. Previously, we demonstrated that maternally derived Huluwa (Hwa) acts as a dorsal determinant, dictating axis formation by activating β-catenin signaling in zebrafish and
Xenopus
. However, the mechanism of activation and fine regulation of the Hwa protein remains unclear. Through candidate screening we identified a mutation at Ser168 in the PPNSP motif of Hwa that dramatically abolishes its axis-inducing activity. Mechanistically, mutating the Ser168 residue reduced its binding affinity to Tankyrase 1/2 and the degradation of the Axin protein, weakening β-catenin signaling activation. We confirmed that Ser168 is phosphorylated and that phosphorylation increases Hwa activity in β-catenin signaling and axis induction. Several kinases including Cdk16, Cdk2, and GSK3β, were found to enhance Ser168 phosphorylation in vitro and in vivo. Both dominant-negative Cdk16 expression and pHwa (Ser168) antibody treatment reduce Hwa function. Lastly, a knock-in allele mutating Ser168 to alanine resulted in embryos lacking body axes, demonstrating that Ser168 is essential to axis formation. In summary, Ser168 acts as a phosphorylation switch in Hwa/β-catenin signaling for embryonic axis induction, regulated by multiple kinases.
Huluwa functions as the dorsal determinant during body axis formation in vertebrates, but how it is regulated remains unclear. Here they identify a phosphorylation switch in the conserved PPNSP motif of Huluwa required for axis induction, which is targeted by multiple kinases.
Journal Article