학술논문

H3K36 methylation maintains cell identity by regulating opposing lineage programmes
Document Type
article
Source
Nature Cell Biology. 25(8)
Subject
Biochemistry and Cell Biology
Biological Sciences
Genetics
Human Genome
Stem Cell Research
Underpinning research
1.1 Normal biological development and functioning
Generic health relevance
Methylation
Histones
Cell Differentiation
Epigenesis
Genetic
Fibroblasts
Cell Lineage
Medical and Health Sciences
Developmental Biology
Biochemistry and cell biology
Language
Abstract
The epigenetic mechanisms that maintain differentiated cell states remain incompletely understood. Here we employed histone mutants to uncover a crucial role for H3K36 methylation in the maintenance of cell identities across diverse developmental contexts. Focusing on the experimental induction of pluripotency, we show that H3K36M-mediated depletion of H3K36 methylation endows fibroblasts with a plastic state poised to acquire pluripotency in nearly all cells. At a cellular level, H3K36M facilitates epithelial plasticity by rendering fibroblasts insensitive to TGFβ signals. At a molecular level, H3K36M enables the decommissioning of mesenchymal enhancers and the parallel activation of epithelial/stem cell enhancers. This enhancer rewiring is Tet dependent and redirects Sox2 from promiscuous somatic to pluripotency targets. Our findings reveal a previously unappreciated dual role for H3K36 methylation in the maintenance of cell identity by integrating a crucial developmental pathway into sustained expression of cell-type-specific programmes, and by opposing the expression of alternative lineage programmes through enhancer methylation.