iScience (Jul 2022)

Fine-tuned KDM1A alternative splicing regulates human cardiomyogenesis through an enzymatic-independent mechanism

  • Veronica Astro,
  • Gustavo Ramirez-Calderon,
  • Roberta Pennucci,
  • Jonatan Caroli,
  • Alfonso Saera-Vila,
  • Kelly Cardona-Londoño,
  • Chiara Forastieri,
  • Elisabetta Fiacco,
  • Fatima Maksoud,
  • Maryam Alowaysi,
  • Elisa Sogne,
  • Andrea Falqui,
  • Federico Gonzàlez,
  • Nuria Montserrat,
  • Elena Battaglioli,
  • Andrea Mattevi,
  • Antonio Adamo

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 25, no. 7
p. 104665

Abstract

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Summary: The histone demethylase KDM1A is a multi-faceted regulator of vital developmental processes, including mesodermal and cardiac tube formation during gastrulation. However, it is unknown whether the fine-tuning of KDM1A splicing isoforms, already shown to regulate neuronal maturation, is crucial for the specification and maintenance of cell identity during cardiogenesis. Here, we discovered a temporal modulation of ubKDM1A and KDM1A+2a during human and mice fetal cardiac development and evaluated their impact on the regulation of cardiac differentiation. We revealed a severely impaired cardiac differentiation in KDM1A−/− hESCs that can be rescued by re-expressing ubKDM1A or catalytically impaired ubKDM1A-K661A, but not by KDM1A+2a or KDM1A+2a-K661A. Conversely, KDM1A+2a−/− hESCs give rise to functional cardiac cells, displaying increased beating amplitude and frequency and enhanced expression of critical cardiogenic markers. Our findings prove the existence of a divergent scaffolding role of KDM1A splice variants, independent of their enzymatic activity, during hESC differentiation into cardiac cells.

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