Ush regulates hemocyte-specific gene expression, fatty acid metabolism and cell cycle progression and cooperates with dNuRD to orchestrate hematopoiesis

Jonathan Lenz(Institute of Molecular Biology), Robert Liefke(Universitätsklinikum Gießen und Marburg), Julianne Funk(Philipps University of Marburg), Samuel Shoup(Institute of Molecular Biology), Andrea Nist(German Center for Lung Research), Thorsten Stiewe(German Center for Lung Research), Robert A. Schulz(University of Notre Dame), Yumiko Tokusumi(University of Notre Dame), Lea Albert(Philipps University of Marburg), Hartmann Raifer, Klaus Förstemann(Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München), Olalla Vázquez(Philipps University of Marburg), Tsuyoshi Tokusumi(University of Notre Dame), Nancy Fossett(University of Maryland, Baltimore), Alexander Brehm(Institute of Molecular Biology)
PLoS Genetics
February 18, 2021
Cited by 18Open Access
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Abstract

The generation of lineage-specific gene expression programmes that alter proliferation capacity, metabolic profile and cell type-specific functions during differentiation from multipotent stem cells to specialised cell types is crucial for development. During differentiation gene expression programmes are dynamically modulated by a complex interplay between sequence-specific transcription factors, associated cofactors and epigenetic regulators. Here, we study U-shaped (Ush), a multi-zinc finger protein that maintains the multipotency of stem cell-like hemocyte progenitors during Drosophila hematopoiesis. Using genomewide approaches we reveal that Ush binds to promoters and enhancers and that it controls the expression of three gene classes that encode proteins relevant to stem cell-like functions and differentiation: cell cycle regulators, key metabolic enzymes and proteins conferring specific functions of differentiated hemocytes. We employ complementary biochemical approaches to characterise the molecular mechanisms of Ush-mediated gene regulation. We uncover distinct Ush isoforms one of which binds the Nucleosome Remodeling and Deacetylation (NuRD) complex using an evolutionary conserved peptide motif. Remarkably, the Ush/NuRD complex specifically contributes to the repression of lineage-specific genes but does not impact the expression of cell cycle regulators or metabolic genes. This reveals a mechanism that enables specific and concerted modulation of functionally related portions of a wider gene expression programme. Finally, we use genetic assays to demonstrate that Ush and NuRD regulate enhancer activity during hemocyte differentiation in vivo and that both cooperate to suppress the differentiation of lamellocytes, a highly specialised blood cell type. Our findings reveal that Ush coordinates proliferation, metabolism and cell type-specific activities by isoform-specific cooperation with an epigenetic regulator.


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