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1.
bioRxiv ; 2024 Jan 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38352532

ABSTRACT

The extraordinary diversity of neuron types in the mammalian brain is delineated at the highest resolution by subtle gene expression differences that may require specialized molecular mechanisms to be maintained. Neurons uniquely express the longest genes in the genome and utilize neuron-enriched non-CG DNA methylation (mCA) together with the Rett syndrome protein, MeCP2, to control gene expression, but the function of these unique gene structures and machinery in regulating finely resolved neuron type-specific gene programs has not been explored. Here, we employ epigenomic and spatial transcriptomic analyses to discover a major role for mCA and MeCP2 in maintaining neuron type-specific gene programs at the finest scale of cellular resolution. We uncover differential susceptibility to MeCP2 loss in neuronal populations depending on global mCA levels and dissect methylation patterns and intragenic enhancer repression that drive overlapping and distinct gene regulation between neuron types. Strikingly, we show that mCA and MeCP2 regulate genes that are repeatedly tuned to differentiate neuron types at the highest cellular resolution, including spatially resolved, vision-dependent gene programs in the visual cortex. These repeatedly tuned genes display genomic characteristics, including long length, numerous intragenic enhancers, and enrichment for mCA, that predispose them to regulation by MeCP2. Thus, long gene regulation by the MeCP2 pathway maintains differential gene expression between closely-related neurons to facilitate the exceptional cellular diversity in the complex mammalian brain.

2.
Sci Rep ; 11(1): 18606, 2021 09 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34545139

ABSTRACT

Inhibition of programmed cell death pathways is frequently observed in cancer cells where it functions to facilitate tumor progression. However, some proteins involved in the regulation of cell death function dichotomously to both promote and inhibit cell death depending on the cellular context. As such, understanding how cell death proteins are regulated in a context-dependent fashion in cancer cells is of utmost importance. We have uncovered evidence that cellular FLICE-like Inhibitory Protein (c-FLIP), a well-known anti-apoptotic protein, is often downregulated in tumor tissue when compared to adjacent normal tissue. These data argue that c-FLIP may have activity distinct from its canonical role in antagonizing cell death. Interestingly, we have discovered that detachment from extracellular matrix (ECM) serves as a signal to elevate c-FLIP transcription and that oncogenic signaling blocks ECM-detachment-induced c-FLIP elevation. In addition, our data reveal that downregulation of c-FLIP promotes luminal filling in mammary acini and that c-FLIP overexpression in cancer cells inhibits colony formation in cells exposed to ECM-detachment. Taken together, our study reveals an unexpected, non-apoptotic role for c-FLIP during ECM-detachment and raises the possibility that c-FLIP may have context-dependent roles during tumorigenesis.


Subject(s)
Breast Neoplasms/metabolism , CASP8 and FADD-Like Apoptosis Regulating Protein/metabolism , Carcinogenesis/metabolism , Extracellular Matrix/metabolism , Signal Transduction/physiology , Apoptosis/physiology , Breast Neoplasms/genetics , Breast Neoplasms/pathology , CASP8 and FADD-Like Apoptosis Regulating Protein/genetics , Carcinogenesis/pathology , Cell Death/physiology , Cell Line, Tumor , Databases, Factual , Female , Humans
3.
Nat Commun ; 12(1): 5702, 2021 09 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34588434

ABSTRACT

Regulation of chromatin plays fundamental roles in the development of the brain. Haploinsufficiency of the chromatin remodeling enzyme CHD7 causes CHARGE syndrome, a genetic disorder that affects the development of the cerebellum. However, how CHD7 controls chromatin states in the cerebellum remains incompletely understood. Using conditional knockout of CHD7 in granule cell precursors in the mouse cerebellum, we find that CHD7 robustly promotes chromatin accessibility, active histone modifications, and RNA polymerase recruitment at enhancers. In vivo profiling of genome architecture reveals that CHD7 concordantly regulates epigenomic modifications associated with enhancer activation and gene expression of topologically-interacting genes. Genome and gene ontology studies show that CHD7-regulated enhancers are associated with genes that control brain tissue morphogenesis. Accordingly, conditional knockout of CHD7 triggers a striking phenotype of cerebellar polymicrogyria, which we have also found in a case of CHARGE syndrome. Finally, we uncover a CHD7-dependent switch in the preferred orientation of granule cell precursor division in the developing cerebellum, providing a potential cellular basis for the cerebellar polymicrogyria phenotype upon loss of CHD7. Collectively, our findings define epigenomic regulation by CHD7 in granule cell precursors and identify abnormal cerebellar patterning upon CHD7 depletion, with potential implications for our understanding of CHARGE syndrome.


Subject(s)
CHARGE Syndrome/genetics , Cerebellum/growth & development , DNA-Binding Proteins/metabolism , Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental , Polymicrogyria/genetics , Animals , CHARGE Syndrome/pathology , Cell Division/genetics , Cerebellum/pathology , Chromatin Assembly and Disassembly , DNA Helicases/genetics , DNA-Binding Proteins/genetics , Disease Models, Animal , Enhancer Elements, Genetic , Epigenesis, Genetic , Histone Code , Humans , Infant , Mice , Mice, Knockout , Mutation , Neural Stem Cells/metabolism , Neurons/metabolism , Polymicrogyria/pathology , RNA-Seq
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