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- Title
PRDM3/16 regulate chromatin accessibility required for NKX2-1 mediated alveolar epithelial differentiation and function.
- Authors
He, Hua; Bell, Sheila M.; Davis, Ashley Kuenzi; Zhao, Shuyang; Sridharan, Anusha; Na, Cheng-Lun; Guo, Minzhe; Xu, Yan; Snowball, John; Swarr, Daniel T.; Zacharias, William J.; Whitsett, Jeffrey A.
- Abstract
While the critical role of NKX2-1 and its transcriptional targets in lung morphogenesis and pulmonary epithelial cell differentiation is increasingly known, mechanisms by which chromatin accessibility alters the epigenetic landscape and how NKX2-1 interacts with other co-activators required for alveolar epithelial cell differentiation and function are not well understood. Combined deletion of the histone methyl transferases Prdm3 and Prdm16 in early lung endoderm causes perinatal lethality due to respiratory failure from loss of AT2 cells and the accumulation of partially differentiated AT1 cells. Combination of single-cell RNA-seq, bulk ATAC-seq, and CUT&RUN data demonstrate that PRDM3 and PRDM16 regulate chromatin accessibility at NKX2-1 transcriptional targets critical for perinatal AT2 cell differentiation and surfactant homeostasis. Lineage specific deletion of PRDM3/16 in AT2 cells leads to lineage infidelity, with PRDM3/16 null cells acquiring partial AT1 fate. Together, these data demonstrate that NKX2-1-dependent regulation of alveolar epithelial cell differentiation is mediated by epigenomic modulation via PRDM3/16. Growth and differentiation of pulmonary epithelial cells is precisely controlled to form the alveoli that create the gas exchange region of the lung. Here, the authors demonstrate that epigenetic modulation of the genome by PRDM3/16 mediates NKX2-1 activity to control alveolar cell fate and differentiation during embryonic and perinatal lung development.
- Publication
Nature Communications, 2024, Vol 15, Issue 1, p1
- ISSN
2041-1723
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1038/s41467-024-52154-3