A fast chemical reprogramming system promotes cell identity transition through a diapause-like state.
Xi ChenYunkun LuLeyun WangXiaojie MaJiaqi PuLianyu LinQian DengYuhan LiWeiyun WangYan JinZhensheng HuZiyu ZhouGuo ChenLiling JiangHao WangXiao-Yang ZhaoXiangwei HeJun-Fen FuHolger A RussWei LiSaiyong ZhuPublished in: Nature cell biology (2023)
Cellular reprogramming by only small molecules holds enormous potentials for regenerative medicine. However, chemical reprogramming remains a slow process and labour intensive, hindering its broad applications and the investigation of underlying molecular mechanisms. Here, through screening of over 21,000 conditions, we develop a fast chemical reprogramming (FCR) system, which significantly improves the kinetics of cell identity rewiring. We find that FCR rapidly goes through an interesting route for pluripotent reprogramming, uniquely transitioning through a developmentally diapause-like state. Furthermore, FCR critically enables comprehensive characterizations using multi-omics technologies, and has revealed unexpected important features including key regulatory factors and epigenetic dynamics. Particularly, activation of pluripotency-related endogenous retroviruses via inhibition of heterochromatin significantly enhances reprogramming. Our studies provide critical insights into how only environmental cues are sufficient to rapidly reinstate pluripotency in somatic cells, and make notable technical and conceptual advances for solving the puzzle of regeneration.