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Cohesin controls X chromosome structure remodeling and X-reactivation during mouse iPSC-reprogramming.

Serena F GenerosoMaria Victoria NeguemborElliot A HershbergRuslan I SadreyevKazuki KurimotoYukihiro YabutaRaffaele RicciPauline AudergonMoritz BauerMitinori SaitouKonrad HochedlingerBrian J BeliveauMaria Pia CosmaJeannie T LeeBernhard Payer
Published in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2023)
Reactivation of the inactive X chromosome is a hallmark epigenetic event during reprogramming of mouse female somatic cells to induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs). This involves global structural remodeling from a condensed, heterochromatic into an open, euchromatic state, thereby changing a transcriptionally inactive into an active chromosome. Despite recent advances, very little is currently known about the molecular players mediating this process and how this relates to iPSC-reprogramming in general. To gain more insight, here we perform a RNAi-based knockdown screen during iPSC-reprogramming of mouse fibroblasts. We discover factors important for X chromosome reactivation (XCR) and iPSC-reprogramming. Among those, we identify the cohesin complex member SMC1a as a key molecule with a specific function in XCR, as its knockdown greatly affects XCR without interfering with iPSC-reprogramming. Using super-resolution microscopy, we find SMC1a to be preferentially enriched on the active compared with the inactive X chromosome and that SMC1a is critical for the decompacted state of the active X. Specifically, depletion of SMC1a leads to contraction of the active X both in differentiated and in pluripotent cells, where it normally is in its most open state. In summary, we reveal cohesin as a key factor for remodeling of the X chromosome from an inactive to an active structure and that this is a critical step for XCR during iPSC-reprogramming.
Keyphrases
  • induced pluripotent stem cells
  • copy number
  • induced apoptosis
  • cell cycle arrest
  • genome wide
  • high resolution
  • dna methylation
  • minimally invasive
  • single cell
  • mass spectrometry
  • cell death
  • high speed