Recruitment of CTCF to the SIRT1 promoter after Oxidative Stress mediates Cardioprotective Transcription.
Tobias WagnerPriyanka PriyankaRudi MichelettiMeyer J FriedmanSreejith J NairAmir GamlielHavilah TaylorXiaoyuan SongMiook ChoSoohwan OhWenbo LiJeehae HanKenneth A OhgiMadeline AbrassAgnieszka D'Antonio-ChronowskaMatteo D'AntonioHelen HazudaRavindranath DuggiralaJohn E BlangeroSheng DingCarlos GuzmannKelly A FrazerAneel K AggarwalAlice E Zemljic-HarpfMichael G RosenfeldYousin SuhPublished in: bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology (2024)
Because most DNA-binding transcription factors (dbTFs), including the architectural regulator CTCF, bind RNA and exhibit di-/multimerization, a central conundrum is whether these distinct properties are regulated post-transcriptionally to modulate transcriptional programs. Here, investigating stress-dependent activation of SIRT1, encoding an evolutionarily-conserved protein deacetylase, we show that induced phosphorylation of CTCF acts as a rheostat to permit CTCF occupancy of low-affinity promoter DNA sites to precisely the levels necessary. This CTCF recruitment to the SIRT1 promoter is eliciting a cardioprotective cardiomyocyte transcriptional activation program and provides resilience against the stress of the beating heart in vivo . Mice harboring a mutation in the conserved low-affinity CTCF promoter binding site exhibit an altered, cardiomyocyte-specific transcriptional program and a systolic heart failure phenotype. This transcriptional role for CTCF reveals that a covalent dbTF modification regulating signal-dependent transcription serves as a previously unsuspected component of the oxidative stress response.
Keyphrases
- transcription factor
- dna binding
- oxidative stress
- heart failure
- ischemia reperfusion injury
- diabetic rats
- genome wide identification
- gene expression
- high glucose
- left ventricular
- quality improvement
- dna damage
- dna methylation
- type diabetes
- atrial fibrillation
- public health
- blood pressure
- angiotensin ii
- climate change
- cystic fibrosis
- endothelial cells
- stress induced
- single molecule
- social support
- metabolic syndrome
- capillary electrophoresis
- depressive symptoms
- staphylococcus aureus
- skeletal muscle
- nucleic acid
- circulating tumor
- acute heart failure