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NKX2-5 mutations causative for congenital heart disease retain functionality and are directed to hundreds of targets

Authors :
Romaric Bouveret
Ashley J Waardenberg
Nicole Schonrock
Mirana Ramialison
Tram Doan
Danielle de Jong
Antoine Bondue
Gurpreet Kaur
Stephanie Mohamed
Hananeh Fonoudi
Chiann-mun Chen
Merridee A Wouters
Shoumo Bhattacharya
Nicolas Plachta
Sally L Dunwoodie
Gavin Chapman
Cédric Blanpain
Richard P Harvey
Source :
eLife, Vol 4 (2015)
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
eLife Sciences Publications Ltd, 2015.

Abstract

We take a functional genomics approach to congenital heart disease mechanism. We used DamID to establish a robust set of target genes for NKX2-5 wild type and disease associated NKX2-5 mutations to model loss-of-function in gene regulatory networks. NKX2-5 mutants, including those with a crippled homeodomain, bound hundreds of targets including NKX2-5 wild type targets and a unique set of "off-targets", and retained partial functionality. NKXΔHD, which lacks the homeodomain completely, could heterodimerize with NKX2-5 wild type and its cofactors, including E26 transformation-specific (ETS) family members, through a tyrosine-rich homophilic interaction domain (YRD). Off-targets of NKX2-5 mutants, but not those of an NKX2-5 YRD mutant, showed overrepresentation of ETS binding sites and were occupied by ETS proteins, as determined by DamID. Analysis of kernel transcription factor and ETS targets show that ETS proteins are highly embedded within the cardiac gene regulatory network. Our study reveals binding and activities of NKX2-5 mutations on WT target and off-targets, guided by interactions with their normal cardiac and general cofactors, and suggest a novel type of gain-of-function in congenital heart disease.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2050084X
Volume :
4
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
eLife
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.4af17a74739c4c6ca56af49e332c7b67
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.06942