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Identification of an evolutionarily conserved domain in Neurod1 favouring enteroendocrine versus goblet cell fate

ARP/ASCL transcription factors are key determinants of cell fate specification in a wide variety of tissues, coordinating the acquisition of generic cell fates and of specific subtype identities. How these factors, recognizing highly similar DNA motifs, display specific activities, is not yet fully...

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Autores principales: Reuter, Anne Sophie, Stern, David, Bernard, Alice, Goossens, Chiara, Lavergne, Arnaud, Flasse, Lydie, Von Berg, Virginie, Manfroid, Isabelle, Peers, Bernard, Voz, Marianne L.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8959185/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35286299
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1010109
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author Reuter, Anne Sophie
Stern, David
Bernard, Alice
Goossens, Chiara
Lavergne, Arnaud
Flasse, Lydie
Von Berg, Virginie
Manfroid, Isabelle
Peers, Bernard
Voz, Marianne L.
author_facet Reuter, Anne Sophie
Stern, David
Bernard, Alice
Goossens, Chiara
Lavergne, Arnaud
Flasse, Lydie
Von Berg, Virginie
Manfroid, Isabelle
Peers, Bernard
Voz, Marianne L.
author_sort Reuter, Anne Sophie
collection PubMed
description ARP/ASCL transcription factors are key determinants of cell fate specification in a wide variety of tissues, coordinating the acquisition of generic cell fates and of specific subtype identities. How these factors, recognizing highly similar DNA motifs, display specific activities, is not yet fully understood. To address this issue, we overexpressed different ARP/ASCL factors in zebrafish ascl1a-/- mutant embryos to determine which ones are able to rescue the intestinal secretory lineage. We found that Ascl1a/b, Atoh1a/b and Neurod1 factors are all able to trigger the first step of the secretory regulatory cascade but distinct secretory cells are induced by these factors. Indeed, Neurod1 rescues the enteroendocrine lineage while Ascl1a/b and Atoh1a/b rescue the goblet cells. Gain-of-function experiments with Ascl1a/Neurod1 chimeric proteins revealed that the functional divergence is encoded by a 19-aa ultra-conserved element (UCE), present in all Neurod members but absent in the other ARP/ASCL proteins. Importantly, inserting the UCE into the Ascl1a protein reverses the rescuing capacity of this Ascl1a chimeric protein that cannot rescue the goblet cells anymore but can efficiently rescue the enteroendocrine cells. This novel domain acts indeed as a goblet cell fate repressor that inhibits gfi1aa expression, known to be important for goblet cell differentiation. Deleting the UCE domain of the endogenous Neurod1 protein leads to an increase in the number of goblet cells concomitant with a reduction of the enteroendocrine cells, phenotype also observed in the neurod1 null mutant. This highlights the crucial function of the UCE domain for NeuroD1 activity in the intestine. As Gfi1 acts as a binary cell fate switch in several tissues where Neurod1 is also expressed, we can envision a similar role of the UCE in other tissues, allowing Neurod1 to repress Gfi1 to influence the balance between cell fates.
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spelling pubmed-89591852022-03-29 Identification of an evolutionarily conserved domain in Neurod1 favouring enteroendocrine versus goblet cell fate Reuter, Anne Sophie Stern, David Bernard, Alice Goossens, Chiara Lavergne, Arnaud Flasse, Lydie Von Berg, Virginie Manfroid, Isabelle Peers, Bernard Voz, Marianne L. PLoS Genet Research Article ARP/ASCL transcription factors are key determinants of cell fate specification in a wide variety of tissues, coordinating the acquisition of generic cell fates and of specific subtype identities. How these factors, recognizing highly similar DNA motifs, display specific activities, is not yet fully understood. To address this issue, we overexpressed different ARP/ASCL factors in zebrafish ascl1a-/- mutant embryos to determine which ones are able to rescue the intestinal secretory lineage. We found that Ascl1a/b, Atoh1a/b and Neurod1 factors are all able to trigger the first step of the secretory regulatory cascade but distinct secretory cells are induced by these factors. Indeed, Neurod1 rescues the enteroendocrine lineage while Ascl1a/b and Atoh1a/b rescue the goblet cells. Gain-of-function experiments with Ascl1a/Neurod1 chimeric proteins revealed that the functional divergence is encoded by a 19-aa ultra-conserved element (UCE), present in all Neurod members but absent in the other ARP/ASCL proteins. Importantly, inserting the UCE into the Ascl1a protein reverses the rescuing capacity of this Ascl1a chimeric protein that cannot rescue the goblet cells anymore but can efficiently rescue the enteroendocrine cells. This novel domain acts indeed as a goblet cell fate repressor that inhibits gfi1aa expression, known to be important for goblet cell differentiation. Deleting the UCE domain of the endogenous Neurod1 protein leads to an increase in the number of goblet cells concomitant with a reduction of the enteroendocrine cells, phenotype also observed in the neurod1 null mutant. This highlights the crucial function of the UCE domain for NeuroD1 activity in the intestine. As Gfi1 acts as a binary cell fate switch in several tissues where Neurod1 is also expressed, we can envision a similar role of the UCE in other tissues, allowing Neurod1 to repress Gfi1 to influence the balance between cell fates. Public Library of Science 2022-03-14 /pmc/articles/PMC8959185/ /pubmed/35286299 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1010109 Text en © 2022 Reuter et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Reuter, Anne Sophie
Stern, David
Bernard, Alice
Goossens, Chiara
Lavergne, Arnaud
Flasse, Lydie
Von Berg, Virginie
Manfroid, Isabelle
Peers, Bernard
Voz, Marianne L.
Identification of an evolutionarily conserved domain in Neurod1 favouring enteroendocrine versus goblet cell fate
title Identification of an evolutionarily conserved domain in Neurod1 favouring enteroendocrine versus goblet cell fate
title_full Identification of an evolutionarily conserved domain in Neurod1 favouring enteroendocrine versus goblet cell fate
title_fullStr Identification of an evolutionarily conserved domain in Neurod1 favouring enteroendocrine versus goblet cell fate
title_full_unstemmed Identification of an evolutionarily conserved domain in Neurod1 favouring enteroendocrine versus goblet cell fate
title_short Identification of an evolutionarily conserved domain in Neurod1 favouring enteroendocrine versus goblet cell fate
title_sort identification of an evolutionarily conserved domain in neurod1 favouring enteroendocrine versus goblet cell fate
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8959185/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35286299
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1010109
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