Harnessing endogenous transcription factors directly by small molecules for chemically induced pluripotency inception.
Yan JinYunkun LuLianyu LinChao LiuXiaojie MaXi ChenZiyu ZhouZhensheng HuJiaqi PuGuo ChenQian DengLiling JiangYuhan LiYulong ZhaoWang HaoJunfen FuWei LiSaiyong ZhuPublished in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2023)
Chemistry-alone approach has recently been applied for incepting pluripotency in somatic cells, representing a breakthrough in biology. However, chemical reprogramming is hampered by low efficiency, and the underlying molecular mechanisms remain unclear. Particularly, chemical compounds do not have specific DNA-recognition domains or transcription regulatory domains, and then how do small molecules work as a driving force for reinstating pluripotency in somatic cells? Furthermore, how to efficiently clear materials and structures of an old cell to prepare the rebuilding of a new one? Here, we show that small molecule CD3254 activates endogenous existing transcription factor RXRα to significantly promote mouse chemical reprogramming. Mechanistically, CD3254-RXRα axis can directly activate all the 11 RNA exosome component genes ( Exosc1-10 and Dis3 ) at transcriptional level. Unexpectedly, rather than degrading mRNAs as its substrates, RNA exosome mainly modulates the degradation of transposable element (TE)-associated RNAs, particularly MMVL30 , which is identified as a new barrier for cell-fate determination. In turn, MMVL30 -mediated inflammation (IFN-γ and TNF-α pathways) is reduced, contributing to the promotion of successful reprogramming. Collectively, our study provides conceptual advances for translating environmental cues into pluripotency inception, particularly, identifies that CD3254-RXRα-RNA exosome axis can promote chemical reprogramming, and suggests modulation of TE-mediated inflammation via CD3254-inducible RNA exosome as important opportunities for controlling cell fates and regenerative medicine.
Keyphrases
- transcription factor
- cell fate
- small molecule
- induced apoptosis
- embryonic stem cells
- oxidative stress
- nucleic acid
- cell cycle arrest
- single cell
- nk cells
- dna binding
- cell therapy
- genome wide identification
- gene expression
- genome wide
- cell death
- rheumatoid arthritis
- stem cells
- copy number
- single molecule
- bone marrow
- solid phase extraction
- mesenchymal stem cells
- drug induced
- heat shock