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Hypoxia promotes osteogenesis via regulation of the mito-nuclear communication

Authors :
Andromachi Pouikli
Monika Maleszewska
Swati Parekh
Chrysa Nikopoulou
Juan-Jose Bonfiglio
Constantine Mylonas
Tonantzi Sandoval
Anna-Lena Schumacher
Yvonne Hinze
Ivan Matic
Peter Tessarz
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2022.

Abstract

Bone marrow mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) reside in a hypoxic niche that maintains their differentiation potential. Several studies have highlighted the critical role of hypoxia (low oxygen concentration) in the regulation of stem cell function, reporting differentiation defects following a switch to normoxia (high oxygen concentration). However, the molecular events triggering changes in stem cell fate decisions in response to high oxygen remain elusive. Here, we study the impact of normoxia in the mito-nuclear communication, with regards to stem cell differentiation. We show that normoxia-cultured MSCs undergo profound transcriptional alterations which cause irreversible osteogenesis defects. Mechanistically, high oxygen promotes chromatin compaction and histone hypo-acetylation, particularly on promoters and enhancers of osteogenic genes. Although normoxia induces rewiring of metabolism, resulting in high acetyl-CoA levels, histone hypo-acetylation occurs due to trapping of acetyl-CoA inside mitochondria, likely due to lower CiC activity. Strikingly, restoring the cytosolic acetyl-CoA pool via acetate supplementation remodels the chromatin landscape and rescues the osteogenic defects. Collectively, our results demonstrate that the metabolism-chromatin-osteogenesis axis is heavily perturbed in response to high oxygen and identify CiC as a novel, oxygen-sensitive regulator of MSC function.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........1a5590500d1bb39c3c33c88e143daf75
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2022.02.26.482117