Cell Reports (Jun 2023)

ETV2 primes hematoendothelial gene enhancers prior to hematoendothelial fate commitment

  • Jeffrey D. Steimle,
  • Chul Kim,
  • Megan Rowton,
  • Rangarajan D. Nadadur,
  • Zhezhen Wang,
  • Matthew Stocker,
  • Andrew D. Hoffmann,
  • Erika Hanson,
  • Junghun Kweon,
  • Tanvi Sinha,
  • Kyunghee Choi,
  • Brian L. Black,
  • John M. Cunningham,
  • Ivan P. Moskowitz,
  • Kohta Ikegami

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 42, no. 6
p. 112665

Abstract

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Summary: Mechanisms underlying distinct specification, commitment, and differentiation phases of cell fate determination remain undefined due to difficulties capturing these processes. Here, we interrogate the activity of ETV2, a transcription factor necessary and sufficient for hematoendothelial differentiation, within isolated fate intermediates. We observe transcriptional upregulation of Etv2 and opening of ETV2-binding sites, indicating new ETV2 binding, in a common cardiac-hematoendothelial progenitor population. Accessible ETV2-binding sites are active at the Etv2 locus but not at other hematoendothelial regulator genes. Hematoendothelial commitment coincides with the activation of a small repertoire of previously accessible ETV2-binding sites at hematoendothelial regulators. Hematoendothelial differentiation accompanies activation of a large repertoire of new ETV2-binding sites and upregulation of hematopoietic and endothelial gene regulatory networks. This work distinguishes specification, commitment, and sublineage differentiation phases of ETV2-dependent transcription and suggests that the shift from ETV2 binding to ETV2-bound enhancer activation, not ETV2 binding to target enhancers, drives hematoendothelial fate commitment.

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