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DNA replication fork speed underlies cell fate changes and promotes reprogramming

Authors :
Tsunetoshi Nakatani
Jiangwei Lin
Fei Ji
Andreas Ettinger
Julien Pontabry
Mikiko Tokoro
Luis Altamirano-Pacheco
Jonathan Fiorentino
Elmir Mahammadov
Yu Hatano
Capucine Van Rechem
Damayanti Chakraborty
Elias R. Ruiz-Morales
Paola Y. Arguello Pascualli
Antonio Scialdone
Kazuo Yamagata
Johnathan R. Whetstine
Ruslan I. Sadreyev
Maria-Elena Torres-Padilla
Source :
Nat. Genet. 54, 318–327 (2022)
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Nature Portfolio, 2022.

Abstract

Totipotency emerges in early embryogenesis, but its molecular underpinnings remain poorly characterized. In the present study, we employed DNA fiber analysis to investigate how pluripotent stem cells are reprogrammed into totipotent-like 2-cell-like cells (2CLCs). We show that totipotent cells of the early mouse embryo have slow DNA replication fork speed and that 2CLCs recapitulate this feature, suggesting that fork speed underlies the transition to a totipotent-like state. 2CLCs emerge concomitant with DNA replication and display changes in replication timing (RT), particularly during the early S-phase. RT changes occur prior to 2CLC emergence, suggesting that RT may predispose to gene expression changes and consequent reprogramming of cell fate. Slowing down replication fork speed experimentally induces 2CLCs. In vivo, slowing fork speed improves the reprogramming efficiency of somatic cell nuclear transfer. Our data suggest that fork speed regulates cellular plasticity and that remodeling of replication features leads to changes in cell fate and reprogramming.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nat. Genet. 54, 318–327 (2022)
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ec9a0e4e28d75bbd99160fdab418257d