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MLL3/MLL4 methyltransferase activities control early embryonic development and embryonic stem cell differentiation in a lineage-selective manner

Authors :
Guojia Xie
Ji-Eun Lee
Anna D. Senft
Young-Kwon Park
Shreeta Chakraborty
Joyce J. Thompson
Chengyu Liu
Todd S. Macfarlan
Pedro P. Rocha
Weiqun Peng
Kai Ge
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2020.

Abstract

H3K4me1 methyltransferases MLL3 (KMT2C) and MLL4 (KMT2D) are critical for enhancer activation, cell differentiation and development. However, roles of MLL3/4 enzymatic activities and MLL3/4-mediated enhancer H3K4me1 in these processes remain unclear. Here, we report that constitutive elimination of both MLL3 and MLL4 enzymatic activities leads to gastrulation failure and early embryonic lethality in mice. However, selective elimination of MLL3/4 enzymatic activities in embryonic, but not extraembryonic, lineages leaves gastrulation largely intact. Consistently, embryonic stem cells (ESCs) lacking MLL3/4 enzymatic activities can differentiate towards the three embryonic germ layers but show aberrant differentiation to extraembryonic endoderm and trophectoderm. The failure in extraembryonic endoderm differentiation can be attributed to markedly reduced enhancer-binding of the lineage-determining transcription factor GATA6. Furthermore, we show that MLL3/4-catalyzed H3K4me1 is largely dispensable for enhancer activation during ESC differentiation. Together, our findings suggest a lineage-selective, but enhancer activation-independent, role of MLL3/4 methyltransferase activities in early embryonic development and embryonic stem cell differentiation.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........9bb09e6c97fc50f0b0b390fe839d5eb4