Mitotic retention of gene expression patterns by the cell fate-determining transcription factor Runx2

Daniel Young(University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School), Mohammad Q. Hassan(University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School), Xiaoqing Yang(University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School), Mario Galindo(University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School), Amjad Javed(University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School), Sayyed K. Zaidi(University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School), Paul S. Furcinitti(University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School), David Lapointe(University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School), Martı́n Montecino(University of Concepción), Jane B. Lian(University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School), Janet L. Stein(University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School), André J. van Wijnen(National Cancer Center), Gary S. Stein(University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
February 21, 2007
Cited by 164Open Access
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Abstract

During cell division, cessation of transcription is coupled with mitotic chromosome condensation. A fundamental biological question is how gene expression patterns are retained during mitosis to ensure the phenotype of progeny cells. We suggest that cell fate-determining transcription factors provide an epigenetic mechanism for the retention of gene expression patterns during cell division. Runx proteins are lineage-specific transcription factors that are essential for hematopoietic, neuronal, gastrointestinal, and osteogenic cell fates. Here we show that Runx2 protein is stable during cell division and remains associated with chromosomes during mitosis through sequence-specific DNA binding. Using siRNA-mediated silencing, mitotic cell synchronization, and expression profiling, we identify Runx2-regulated genes that are modulated postmitotically. Novel target genes involved in cell growth and differentiation were validated by chromatin immunoprecipitation. Importantly, we find that during mitosis, when transcription is shut down, Runx2 selectively occupies target gene promoters, and Runx2 deficiency alters mitotic histone modifications. We conclude that Runx proteins have an active role in retaining phenotype during cell division to support lineage-specific control of gene expression in progeny cells.


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