transcriptional state
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Author(s):  
Peng Sun ◽  
Yingying Han ◽  
Maksim Plikus ◽  
Xing Dai

AbstractStem-cell containing mammary basal epithelial cells exist in a quasi-mesenchymal transcriptional state characterized by simultaneous expression of typical epithelial genes and typical mesenchymal genes. Whether robust maintenance of such a transcriptional state is required for adult basal stem cells to fuel self-renewal and regeneration remains unclear. In this work, we utilized SMA-CreER to direct efficient basal cell-specific deletion of Ovol2, which encodes a transcription factor that inhibits epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT), in adult mammary gland. We identified a basal cell-intrinsic role of Ovol2 in promoting epithelial, and suppressing mesenchymal, molecular traits. Interestingly, Ovol2-deficient basal cells display minimal perturbations in their ability to support tissue homeostasis, colony formation, and transplant outgrowth. These findings underscore the ability of adult mammary basal cells to tolerate molecular perturbations associated with altered epithelia-mesenchymal plasticity without drastically compromising their self-renewal potential.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yannik Severin ◽  
Benjamin D. Hale ◽  
Julien Mena ◽  
David Goslings ◽  
Beat M. Frey ◽  
...  

SummaryPhenotypic plasticity is essential to the immune system, yet the factors that shape it are not fully understood. Here, we comprehensively analyze immune cell phenotypes including morphology across human cohorts by single-round multiplexed immunofluorescence, automated microscopy, and deep learning. Using the uncertainty of convolutional neural networks to cluster the phenotypes of 8 distinct immune cell subsets, we find that the resulting maps are influenced by donor age, gender, and blood pressure, revealing distinct polarization and activation-associated phenotypes across immune cell classes. We further associate T-cell morphology to transcriptional state based on their joint donor variability, and validate an inflammation-associated polarized T-cell morphology, and an age-associated loss of mitochondria in CD4+ T-cells. Taken together, we show that immune cell phenotypes reflect both molecular and personal health information, opening new perspectives into the deep immune phenotyping of individual people in health and disease.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Danuta M Jeziorska ◽  
Edward A J Tunnacliffe ◽  
Jill M Brown ◽  
Helena Ayyub ◽  
Jacqueline A Sloane-Stanley ◽  
...  

Determining the mechanisms by which genes are switched on and off during development and differentiation is a key aim of current biomedical research. Gene transcription has been widely observed to occur in a discontinuous fashion, with short bursts of activity interspersed with longer periods of inactivity. It is currently not known if or how this dynamic behaviour changes as mammalian cells differentiate. To investigate this, using a newly developed on-microscope analysis, we monitored mouse α-globin transcription in live cells throughout sequential stages of erythropoiesis. We find that changes in the overall levels of α-globin transcription are most closely associated with changes in the fraction of time a gene spends in the active transcriptional state. We identify differences in the patterns of transcriptional bursting throughout differentiation, with maximal transcriptional activity occurring in the mid-phase of differentiation. Early in differentiation, we observe increased fluctuation in the patterns of transcriptional activity whereas at the peak of gene expression, in early and intermediate erythroblasts, transcription appears to be relatively stable and efficient. Later during differentiation as α-globin expression declines, we again observed more variability in transcription within individual cells. We propose that the observed changes in transcriptional behaviour may reflect changes in the stability of enhancer-promoter interactions and the formation of active transcriptional compartments as gene expression is turned on and subsequently declines at sequential stages of differentiation.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Iftekhar A Showpnil ◽  
Julia Selich-Anderson ◽  
Cenny Taslim ◽  
Megann A Boone ◽  
Jesse C Crow ◽  
...  

Ewing sarcoma is a prototypical fusion transcription factor-associated pediatric cancer that expresses EWS/FLI or highly related fusions. EWS/FLI dysregulates transcription to induce and maintain sarcomagenesis, but the mechanisms utilized are not fully understood. We therefore sought to define the global effects of EWS/FLI on chromatin conformation and transcription in Ewing sarcoma. We found that EWS/FLI (and EWS/ERG) genomic localization is largely conserved across multiple patient-derived Ewing sarcoma cell lines. EWS/FLI binding is primarily associated with compartment activation, establishment of topologically-associated domain (TAD) boundaries, enhancer-promoter looping that involve both intra- and inter-TAD interactions, and gene activation. Importantly, local chromatin features provide the basis for transcriptional heterogeneity in regulation of direct EWS/FLI target genes across different Ewing sarcoma cell lines. These data demonstrate a key role of EWS/FLI in mediating genomewide changes in chromatin configuration and support the notion that fusion transcription factors serve as master regulators through three-dimensional reprogramming of chromatin.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nerea Berastegui ◽  
Marina Ainciburu ◽  
Juan P. Romero ◽  
Ana Alfonso-Pierola ◽  
Céline Philippe ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTMyelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) are clonal hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) malignancies characterized by ineffective hematopoiesis with increased incidence in elderly individuals. Genetic alterations do not fully explain the molecular pathogenesis of the disease, indicating that other types of lesions may play a role in its development. In this work, we analyzed the transcriptional lesions of human HSCs, demonstrating how aging and MDS are characterized by a complex transcriptional rewiring that manifests as diverse linear and non-linear transcriptional dynamisms. While aging-associated lesions seemed to predispose elderly HSCs to myeloid transformation, disease-specific alterations may be involved in triggering MDS development. Among MDS-specific lesions, we detected the overexpression of the transcription factor DDIT3. Exogenous upregulation of DDIT3 in human healthy HSCs induced an MDS-like transcriptional state, and a delay in erythropoiesis, with an accumulation of cells in early stages of erythroid differentiation, as determined by single-cell RNA-sequencing. Increased DDIT3 expression was associated with downregulation of transcription factors required for normal erythropoiesis, such as KLF1, TAL1 or SOX6, and with a failure in the activation of their erythroid transcriptional programs. Finally, DDIT3 knockdown in CD34+ cells from MDS patients was able to restore erythropoiesis, as demonstrated by immunophenotypic and transcriptional profiling. These results demonstrate that DDIT3 may be a driver of MDS transformation, and a potential therapeutic target to restore the inefficient erythropoiesis characterizing these patients.KEY POINTSHuman HSCs undergo a complex transcriptional rewiring in aging and MDS that may contribute to myeloid transformation.DDIT3 overexpression induces a failure in the activation of erythroid transcriptional programs, leading to inefficient erythropoiesis.


Epigenomes ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 5 (3) ◽  
pp. 17
Author(s):  
Annick Dubois ◽  
François Roudier

CRISPR-based epigenome editing uses dCas9 as a platform to recruit transcription or chromatin regulators at chosen loci. Despite recent and ongoing advances, the full potential of these approaches to studying chromatin functions in vivo remains challenging to exploit. In this review we discuss how recent progress in plants and animals provides new routes to investigate the function of chromatin regulators and address the complexity of associated regulations that are often interconnected. While efficient transcriptional engineering methodologies have been developed and can be used as tools to alter the chromatin state of a locus, examples of direct manipulation of chromatin regulators remain scarce in plants. These reports also reveal pitfalls and limitations of epigenome engineering approaches that are nevertheless informative as they are often associated with locus- and context-dependent features, which include DNA accessibility, initial chromatin and transcriptional state or cellular dynamics. Strategies implemented in different organisms to overcome and even take advantage of these limitations are highlighted, which will further improve our ability to establish the causality and hierarchy of chromatin dynamics on genome regulation.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Konner Winkley ◽  
Dithi Banerjee ◽  
Todd Bradley ◽  
Boryana Koseva ◽  
Warren A. Cheung ◽  
...  

AbstractPrevious studies focusing on the age disparity in COVID-19 severity have suggested that younger individuals mount a more robust innate immune response in the nasal mucosa after infection with SARS-CoV-2. However, it is unclear if this reflects increased immune activation or increased immune residence in the nasal mucosa. We hypothesized that immune residency in the nasal mucosa of healthy individuals may differ across the age range. We applied single-cell RNA-sequencing and measured the cellular composition and transcriptional profile of the nasal mucosa in 35 SARS-CoV-2 negative children and adults, ranging in age from 4 months to 65 years. We analyzed in total of ~ 30,000 immune and epithelial cells and found that age and immune cell proportion in the nasal mucosa are inversely correlated, with little evidence for structural changes in the transcriptional state of a given cell type across the age range. Orthogonal validation by epigenome sequencing indicate that it is especially cells of the innate immune system that underlie the age-association. Additionally, we characterize the predominate immune cell type in the nasal mucosa: a resident T cell like population with potent antiviral properties. These results demonstrate fundamental changes in the immune cell makeup of the uninfected nasal mucosa over the lifespan. The resource we generate here is an asset for future studies focusing on respiratory infection and immunization strategies.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yael Dagan ◽  
Yarden Yesharim ◽  
Ashley R. Bonneau ◽  
Schraga Schwartz ◽  
Peter W. Reddien ◽  
...  

Regeneration requires accurate production of missing cell lineages. Cell production is driven by changes to gene expression, which is shaped by multiple layers of regulation. Here, we find that the ubiquitous mRNA base-modification, m6A, is required for proper cell fate choice and cellular maturation in planarian stem cells (neoblasts). We mapped m6A-enriched regions in 7,600 planarian genes, and found that perturbation of the m6A pathway resulted in progressive deterioration of tissues and death. Using single cell RNA sequencing of >20,000 cells following perturbation of the pathway, we discovered that m6A negatively regulates transcription of histone variants, and that inhibition of the pathway resulted in accumulation of undifferentiated cells throughout the animal in an abnormal transcriptional state. Analysis of >1000 planarian gene expression datasets revealed that the inhibition of the chromatin modifying complex NuRD had almost indistinguishable consequences, unraveling an unappreciated link between m6A and chromatin modifications. Our findings reveal that m6A is critical for planarian stem cell homeostasis and gene regulation in regeneration.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Yuta Asano ◽  
Joe Daccache ◽  
Dharmendra Jain ◽  
Kichul Ko ◽  
Andrew Kinloch ◽  
...  

AbstractIntrarenal B cells in human renal allografts indicate transplant recipients with a poor prognosis, but how these cells contribute to rejection is unclear. Here we show using single-cell RNA sequencing that intrarenal class-switched B cells have an innate cell transcriptional state resembling mouse peritoneal B1 or B-innate (Bin) cells. Antibodies generated by Bin cells do not bind donor-specific antigens nor are they enriched for reactivity to ubiquitously expressed self-antigens. Rather, Bin cells frequently express antibodies reactive with either renal-specific or inflammation-associated antigens. Furthermore, local antigens can drive Bin cell proliferation and differentiation into plasma cells expressing self-reactive antibodies. These data show a mechanism of human inflammation in which a breach in organ-restricted tolerance by infiltrating innate-like B cells drives local tissue destruction.


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