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ZMYM2 controls human transposable element transcription through distinct co-regulatory complexes

ZMYM2 is a zinc finger transcriptional regulator that plays a key role in promoting and maintaining cell identity. It has been implicated in several diseases such as congenital anomalies of the kidney where its activity is diminished and cancer where it participates in oncogenic fusion protein event...

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Autores principales: Owen, Danielle J, Aguilar-Martinez, Elisa, Ji, Zongling, Li, Yaoyong, Sharrocks, Andrew D
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10629813/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37934570
http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.86669
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author Owen, Danielle J
Aguilar-Martinez, Elisa
Ji, Zongling
Li, Yaoyong
Sharrocks, Andrew D
author_facet Owen, Danielle J
Aguilar-Martinez, Elisa
Ji, Zongling
Li, Yaoyong
Sharrocks, Andrew D
author_sort Owen, Danielle J
collection PubMed
description ZMYM2 is a zinc finger transcriptional regulator that plays a key role in promoting and maintaining cell identity. It has been implicated in several diseases such as congenital anomalies of the kidney where its activity is diminished and cancer where it participates in oncogenic fusion protein events. ZMYM2 is thought to function through promoting transcriptional repression and here we provide more evidence to support this designation. Here we studied ZMYM2 function in human cells and demonstrate that ZMYM2 is part of distinct chromatin-bound complexes including the established LSD1-CoREST-HDAC1 corepressor complex. We also identify new functional and physical interactions with ADNP and TRIM28/KAP1. The ZMYM2-TRIM28 complex forms in a SUMO-dependent manner and is associated with repressive chromatin. ZMYM2 and TRIM28 show strong functional similarity and co-regulate a large number of genes. However, there are no strong links between ZMYM2-TRIM28 binding events and nearby individual gene regulation. Instead, ZMYM2-TRIM28 appears to regulate genes in a more regionally defined manner within TADs where it can directly regulate co-associated retrotransposon expression. We find that different types of ZMYM2 binding complex associate with and regulate distinct subclasses of retrotransposons, with ZMYM2-ADNP complexes at SINEs and ZMYM2-TRIM28 complexes at LTR elements. We propose a model whereby ZMYM2 acts directly through retrotransposon regulation, which may then potentially affect the local chromatin environment and associated coding gene expression.
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spelling pubmed-106298132023-11-08 ZMYM2 controls human transposable element transcription through distinct co-regulatory complexes Owen, Danielle J Aguilar-Martinez, Elisa Ji, Zongling Li, Yaoyong Sharrocks, Andrew D eLife Chromosomes and Gene Expression ZMYM2 is a zinc finger transcriptional regulator that plays a key role in promoting and maintaining cell identity. It has been implicated in several diseases such as congenital anomalies of the kidney where its activity is diminished and cancer where it participates in oncogenic fusion protein events. ZMYM2 is thought to function through promoting transcriptional repression and here we provide more evidence to support this designation. Here we studied ZMYM2 function in human cells and demonstrate that ZMYM2 is part of distinct chromatin-bound complexes including the established LSD1-CoREST-HDAC1 corepressor complex. We also identify new functional and physical interactions with ADNP and TRIM28/KAP1. The ZMYM2-TRIM28 complex forms in a SUMO-dependent manner and is associated with repressive chromatin. ZMYM2 and TRIM28 show strong functional similarity and co-regulate a large number of genes. However, there are no strong links between ZMYM2-TRIM28 binding events and nearby individual gene regulation. Instead, ZMYM2-TRIM28 appears to regulate genes in a more regionally defined manner within TADs where it can directly regulate co-associated retrotransposon expression. We find that different types of ZMYM2 binding complex associate with and regulate distinct subclasses of retrotransposons, with ZMYM2-ADNP complexes at SINEs and ZMYM2-TRIM28 complexes at LTR elements. We propose a model whereby ZMYM2 acts directly through retrotransposon regulation, which may then potentially affect the local chromatin environment and associated coding gene expression. eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd 2023-11-07 /pmc/articles/PMC10629813/ /pubmed/37934570 http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.86669 Text en © 2023, Owen, Aguilar-Martinez, Ji et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use and redistribution provided that the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Chromosomes and Gene Expression
Owen, Danielle J
Aguilar-Martinez, Elisa
Ji, Zongling
Li, Yaoyong
Sharrocks, Andrew D
ZMYM2 controls human transposable element transcription through distinct co-regulatory complexes
title ZMYM2 controls human transposable element transcription through distinct co-regulatory complexes
title_full ZMYM2 controls human transposable element transcription through distinct co-regulatory complexes
title_fullStr ZMYM2 controls human transposable element transcription through distinct co-regulatory complexes
title_full_unstemmed ZMYM2 controls human transposable element transcription through distinct co-regulatory complexes
title_short ZMYM2 controls human transposable element transcription through distinct co-regulatory complexes
title_sort zmym2 controls human transposable element transcription through distinct co-regulatory complexes
topic Chromosomes and Gene Expression
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10629813/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37934570
http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.86669
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