Dual regulatory switch through interactions of Tcf7l2/Tcf4 with stage-specific partners propels oligodendroglial maturation

Chuntao Zhao(Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center), Yaqi Deng(Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center), Lei Liu(Sichuan University), Kun Yu(Sichuan University), Liguo Zhang(Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center), Haibo Wang(Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center), Xuelian He(Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center), Jincheng Wang(Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center), Changqing Lu(Sichuan University), Lai-Man N. Wu(Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center), Qinjie Weng(Zhejiang University), Meng Mao(Sichuan University), Jianrong Li(Texas A&M University), Johan H. van Es(Hubrecht Institute for Developmental Biology and Stem Cell Research), Mei Xin(Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center), Lee Parry(Cardiff University), Steven A. Goldman(University of Rochester Medical Center), Hans Clevers(Hubrecht Institute for Developmental Biology and Stem Cell Research), Q. Richard Lu(Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center)
Nature Communications
March 9, 2016
Cited by 163Open Access
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Abstract

Constitutive activation of Wnt/β-catenin inhibits oligodendrocyte myelination. Tcf7l2/Tcf4, a β-catenin transcriptional partner, is required for oligodendrocyte differentiation. How Tcf7l2 modifies β-catenin signalling and controls myelination remains elusive. Here we define a stage-specific Tcf7l2-regulated transcriptional circuitry in initiating and sustaining oligodendrocyte differentiation. Multistage genome occupancy analyses reveal that Tcf7l2 serially cooperates with distinct co-regulators to control oligodendrocyte lineage progression. At the differentiation onset, Tcf7l2 interacts with a transcriptional co-repressor Kaiso/Zbtb33 to block β-catenin signalling. During oligodendrocyte maturation, Tcf7l2 recruits and cooperates with Sox10 to promote myelination. In that context, Tcf7l2 directly activates cholesterol biosynthesis genes and cholesterol supplementation partially rescues oligodendrocyte differentiation defects in Tcf712 mutants. Together, we identify stage-specific co-regulators Kaiso and Sox10 that sequentially interact with Tcf7l2 to coordinate the switch at the transitions of differentiation initiation and maturation during oligodendrocyte development, and point to a previously unrecognized role of Tcf7l2 in control of cholesterol biosynthesis for CNS myelinogenesis.


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