A Mettl16/m 6 A/mybl2b/Igf2bp1 axis ensures cell cycle progression of embryonic hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells.
Yunqiao HanKui SunShanshan YuYayun QinZuxiao ZhangJiong LuoHualei HuLiyan DaiManman CuiChaolin JiangFei LiuYuwen HuangPan GaoXiang ChenTianqing XinXiang RenXiaoyan WuJieping SongQing Kenneth WangZhaohui TangJianjun ChenHaojian ZhangXianqin ZhangMugen LiuDaji LuoPublished in: The EMBO journal (2024)
Prenatal lethality associated with mouse knockout of Mettl16, a recently identified RNA N6-methyladenosine (m 6 A) methyltransferase, has hampered characterization of the essential role of METTL16-mediated RNA m 6 A modification in early embryonic development. Here, using cross-species single-cell RNA sequencing analysis, we found that during early embryonic development, METTL16 is more highly expressed in vertebrate hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells (HSPCs) than other methyltransferases. In Mettl16-deficient zebrafish, proliferation capacity of embryonic HSPCs is compromised due to G1/S cell cycle arrest, an effect whose rescue requires Mettl16 with intact methyltransferase activity. We further identify the cell-cycle transcription factor mybl2b as a directly regulated by Mettl16-mediated m 6 A modification. Mettl16 deficiency resulted in the destabilization of mybl2b mRNA, likely due to lost binding by the m 6 A reader Igf2bp1 in vivo. Moreover, we found that the METTL16-m 6 A-MYBL2-IGF2BP1 axis controlling G1/S progression is conserved in humans. Collectively, our findings elucidate the critical function of METTL16-mediated m 6 A modification in HSPC cell cycle progression during early embryonic development.