Mitochondrial stress induces AREG expression and epigenomic remodeling through c-JUN and YAP-mediated enhancer activation.
Yuko HinoKatsuya NagaokaShinya OkiKan EtohShinjiro HinoMitsuyoshi NakaoPublished in: Nucleic acids research (2022)
Nucleus-mitochondria crosstalk is essential for cellular and organismal homeostasis. Although anterograde (nucleus-to-mitochondria) pathways have been well characterized, retrograde (mitochondria-to-nucleus) pathways remain to be clarified. Here, we found that mitochondrial dysfunction triggered a retrograde signaling via unique transcriptional and chromatin factors in hepatic cells. Our transcriptomic analysis revealed that the loss of mitochondrial transcription factor A led to mitochondrial dysfunction and dramatically induced expression of amphiregulin (AREG) and other secretory protein genes. AREG expression was also induced by various mitochondria stressors and was upregulated in murine liver injury models, suggesting that AREG expression is a hallmark of mitochondrial damage. Using epigenomic and informatic approaches, we identified that mitochondrial dysfunction-responsive enhancers of AREG gene were activated by c-JUN/YAP1/TEAD axis and were repressed by chromatin remodeler BRG1. Furthermore, while mitochondrial dysfunction-activated enhancers were enriched with JUN and TEAD binding motifs, the repressed enhancers possessed the binding motifs for hepatocyte nuclear factor 4α, suggesting that both stress responsible and cell type-specific enhancers were reprogrammed. Our study revealed that c-JUN and YAP1-mediated enhancer activation shapes the mitochondrial stress-responsive phenotype, which may shift from metabolism to stress adaptation including protein secretion under such stressed conditions.
Keyphrases
- transcription factor
- binding protein
- poor prognosis
- liver injury
- oxidative stress
- drug induced
- nuclear factor
- cell death
- genome wide
- gene expression
- dna binding
- dna damage
- stress induced
- reactive oxygen species
- genome wide identification
- endoplasmic reticulum
- long non coding rna
- induced apoptosis
- toll like receptor
- single cell
- cell cycle arrest
- cell proliferation
- diabetic rats
- dna methylation
- copy number
- heat shock