Dynamic Association of NUP98 with the Human Genome
Faithful execution of developmental gene expression programs occurs at multiple levels and involves many different components such as transcription factors, histone-modification enzymes, and mRNA processing proteins. Recent evidence suggests that nucleoporins, well known components that control nucleo-cytoplasmic trafficking, have wide-ranging functions in developmental gene regulation that potentially extend beyond their role in nuclear transport. Whether the unexpected role of nuclear pore proteins in transcription regulation, which initially has been described in fungi and flies, also applies to human cells is unknown. Here we show at a genome-wide level that the nuclear pore protein NUP98 associates with developmentally regulated genes active during human embryonic stem cell differentiation. Overexpression of a dominant negative fragment of NUP98 levels decreases expression levels of NUP98-bound genes. In addition, we identify two modes of developmental gene regulation by NUP98 that are differentiated by the spatial localization of NUP98 target genes. Genes in the initial stage of developmental induction can associate with NUP98 that is embedded in the nuclear pores at the nuclear periphery. Alternatively, genes that are highly induced can interact with NUP98 in the nuclear interior, away from the nuclear pores. This work demonstrates for the first time that NUP98 dynamically associates with the human genome during differentiation, revealing a role of a nuclear pore protein in regulating developmental gene expression programs.
Published in the journal:
Dynamic Association of NUP98 with the Human Genome. PLoS Genet 9(2): e32767. doi:10.1371/journal.pgen.1003308
Category:
Research Article
doi:
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1003308
Summary
Faithful execution of developmental gene expression programs occurs at multiple levels and involves many different components such as transcription factors, histone-modification enzymes, and mRNA processing proteins. Recent evidence suggests that nucleoporins, well known components that control nucleo-cytoplasmic trafficking, have wide-ranging functions in developmental gene regulation that potentially extend beyond their role in nuclear transport. Whether the unexpected role of nuclear pore proteins in transcription regulation, which initially has been described in fungi and flies, also applies to human cells is unknown. Here we show at a genome-wide level that the nuclear pore protein NUP98 associates with developmentally regulated genes active during human embryonic stem cell differentiation. Overexpression of a dominant negative fragment of NUP98 levels decreases expression levels of NUP98-bound genes. In addition, we identify two modes of developmental gene regulation by NUP98 that are differentiated by the spatial localization of NUP98 target genes. Genes in the initial stage of developmental induction can associate with NUP98 that is embedded in the nuclear pores at the nuclear periphery. Alternatively, genes that are highly induced can interact with NUP98 in the nuclear interior, away from the nuclear pores. This work demonstrates for the first time that NUP98 dynamically associates with the human genome during differentiation, revealing a role of a nuclear pore protein in regulating developmental gene expression programs.
Introduction
In eukaryotes, the nuclear envelope (NE) forms a membrane barrier around the nuclear genome. All molecular trafficking in and out of the nucleus is mediated by nuclear pore complexes, large multiprotein channels composed of ∼30 different nuclear pore proteins (Nups) that span the NE [1]–[3]. In addition to mediating transport, nuclear pore complexes have also been implicated in genome organization and transcriptional regulation [4]. Initial electron microscopy studies suggested that nuclear pore complexes specifically associate with decondensed, transcriptionally active euchromatin in an otherwise highly condensed, heterochromatic nuclear periphery [5]–[7]. Based on these observations, it has been proposed that nuclear pore complexes may interact with active genes to promote the export of their transcripts [7]. Consistent with this hypothesis, several reports have demonstrated that Nups bind active regions of the genome in Saccharomyces cerevisiae and more recently in Drosophila melanogaster [4], [8]–[17]. In yeast, all Nup-genome interactions identified so far are thought to occur at nuclear pore complexes at the nuclear periphery (i.e. ‘on-pore’ interaction). However, the organization of the nuclear pore complexes is highly dynamic [18] and a subset of mobile Nups has been shown to shuttle on and off nuclear pore complexes, thereby potentially extending the functional reach of Nups. Interestingly, evidence of intranuclear Nups that bind specific regions of the genome has been found in Drosophila suggesting that Nups can also bind chromatin away from the nuclear pores (i.e. ‘off-pore’ interaction) [8], [13], [17]. In Drosophila embryonic culture cells, Nups predominantly interacted with active genes inside the nucleoplasm, whereas the nuclear pore complexes at the nuclear periphery was associated with repressed genes [17].
Limited studies have been carried out to address whether Nups play an important role in transcription in the mammalian genome. In neonatal rat ventricular cardiomyocytes, NUP155 was found to interact with the histone deacetylase HDAC4 and nuclear pore components associate with a number of HDAC4-target genes [19]. The only study that addressed the potential role of Nups in gene regulation in human cells has shown that nuclear pore complexes preferentially associate with repressive chromatin domains [20]. Combined with studies from fungi and flies, it appears that Nups can interact with both active and silent loci, depending on the cell type or the type of Nups investigated. Therefore, it is tempting to speculate that Nups may dynamically associate with the genome according to developmental stages during differentiation. Accumulating evidence suggests that the organization of the genome is highly dynamic during development [21]–[23]. For example, on a global level, the hyperdynamic and open chromatin organization has been correlated to the differentiation potential of pluripotent cells, and this property is lost upon differentiation. Moreover, on the single-gene level, repositioning of developmental genes and tissue-specific promoters relative to the nuclear periphery during differentiation has been well documented [24]–[30]. The potential involvement of Nups in chromatin-related aspects of developmental regulation is further supported by the findings that mutations in multiple Nups caused specific developmental defects rather than a global deficiency that would have been predicted if the sole role of Nups was to mediate transport in all cell types [31].
Several studies suggest that Nups are involved in developmental gene regulation in lower organisms. In yeast, the mating pheromone alpha factor induces alterations in the association between Nups and specific genomic regions [9]. In Drosophila salivary glands, a subset of Nups including the mobile NUP98 can dissociate from nuclear pores and activate a number of ecdysone-induced genes in the nuclear interior (i.e. ‘off-pore’ Nup-gene interaction). These findings raise several key questions regarding the chromatin-related function of Nups during development. For instance, are Nups involved in establishing gene expression programs in diploid cells of mammalian organisms, especially human, during differentiation of pluripotent cells and establishment of cell fate? Do Nups relocate to developmentally induced genes on a genome-wide level in human cells? What are the differences between ‘on-pore’ and ‘off-pore’ Nup-gene interactions in the context of development, and do nuclear pores at the nuclear periphery have a role in developmental gene regulation?
We decided to determine if NUP98, a nuclear pore complex component that is located on both the cytoplasmic and the nucleoplasmic faces of the nuclear pore complex and has the capacity to move on and off the nuclear pore [18], [32], interacts with the human genome. Using chromatin immunoprecipiation sequencing (ChIP-seq) we show that NUP98 associates with developmentally regulated genes in stem cells and progenitor cells. In neural progenitor cells, overexpression of full-length NUP98 increases expression levels of a subset of its binding targets, and overexpression of a dominant negative fragment of NUP98 decreases mRNA levels of NUP98-associated genes. In addition, we found that developmental NUP98-gene interactions occur both on nuclear pore complexes and in the nuclear interior. The ‘on-pore’ interactions seem to be enriched for genes involved in the initial stage of developmental induction, whereas the ‘off-pore’ (i.e. intranuclear) targets are comprised of genes mediating later stages of developmental induction. We concluded that during human stem cell differentiation, NUP98 associated with specific regions of the genome in a manner that was tightly coupled to the developmental stage. In addition, the nuclear pores appeared to function as a transient platform that supported the initial induction of developmental genes.
Results
NUP98 binds to distinct genomic regions in different human cell types
To test whether NUP98 can bind to the mammalian genome during cell differentiation, we performed ChIP-Seq experiments on cultured human embryonic stem cells (ESCs), neural progenitor cells (NeuPCs) that were differentiated in vitro from ESCs, and neurons that were differentiated in vitro from NeuPCs. We also determined the presence of chromatin-bound NUP98 in lung fibroblast IMR90 cells as an example of another differentiated cell type. As expected, in all four cell types, NUP98 was found both on nuclear pores at the nuclear periphery and intranuclear sites, consistent with its reported capacity to move on and off the nuclear pores (Figure 1A) [18], [32]. We first validated the ChIP-Seq method using IMR90 cells with two independent antibodies against human NUP98. As expected, both antibodies stained nuclear pores and a few intranuclear sites in IMR90 cells (Figure S1A). Additionally, both proved efficient and specific in western blot and immunoprecipitation experiments (Figure S1B, S1C). Since Nups were not expected to bind directly to DNA, we employed two cross-linking conditions for the ChIP-Seq experiment, formaldehyde single cross-linking and formaldehyde-disuccinimidyl glutarate double-crosslinking in order to more efficiently crosslink indirect Nup-chromatin contacts. After crosslinking, we immunoprecipitated NUP98 using the two antibodies, purified DNA that was immunoprecipitated, and had DNA amplified and subjected to deep sequencing. Sequencing reads were then mapped to the human genome (Figure S2). The results from the four ChIP-Seq experiments, using two antibodies and two cross-linking conditions, were highly consistent (Figure S1D–S1F), with 73% NUP98-binding regions from pull-down using the first antibody overlapping with 78% NUP98-binding regions using the second antibody. We further validated our results by randomly selecting several NUP98-binding regions called from the ChIP-Seq experiment and confirming the interaction between NUP98 and these regions by ChIP-qPCR (Figure S1G).
After validation of the ChIP-Seq method, we extended the ChIP-Seq analysis to human embryonic stem cells, human embryonic stem cell-derived NeuPCs that were ∼90% positive for the neural progenitor cell marker Nestin (Figure S3), and postmitotic neurons. Interestingly, the genome-binding pattern of NUP98 varied greatly depending on the developmental stage of the cells. NUP98 occupied more genomic regions in ESCs and NeuPCs than in differentiated cells. Further analysis revealed that 71% of NUP98-chromatin sites in ESCs and 74% in NeuPCs were specific for the respective cell-type (i.e. not found in the other cell types) (Figure 1B, 1C). The most dramatic difference was found in neurons where essentially no significant enrichment for NUP98 binding could be identified (Figure S4 and data not shown). Together, these findings suggest that Nup98's ability to interact with the human genome is developmentally regulated.
We further analyzed whether NUP98-DNA interaction occurred on gene regulatory elements and/or coding regions in ESCs and NeuPCs by assigning NUP98 binding regions to promoters, exons, introns, and intergenic regions. In both ESCs and NeuPCs, NUP98 bound to 500–600 genes (Figure 1D) and exhibited a significant enrichment in promoter regions (Figure 1E). It is important to note that the few NUP98 binding sites in IMR90 cells were preferentially found in intergenic regions (Figure 1F), providing additional evidence for a dynamic and developmentally-controlled association of NUP98 with the human genome. Although we cannot rule out that NUP98 binding in IMR90 has functional significance, we decided to focus our analysis on NUP98-bound genes in ESCs and NeuPCs.
NUP98 associates with conserved DNA motifs
In order to identify potential DNA sequence motifs and/or potential NUP98-interacting transcription factors that direct NUP98-DNA binding, we analyzed the transcription factor motifs overrepresented in NUP98-binding sequences found in ESCs and NeuPCs. We found that GA-boxes were an evolutionarily conserved NUP98-associated motif. This motif was not only overrepresented in human NUP98-binding genomic regions, but also in published Drosophila NUP98 binding sequences (Figure 2A, Figure S5A and S5B) [8], [17]. In Drosophila, GA-boxes are recognized by GAGA factor, which is a transcriptional activator that is crucial for the proper expression of several homeotic genes [33]. This suggests that the interaction between NUP98 and GA-box motifs, potentially related to the regulation of developmental genes, is evolutionary conserved and further validates our ChIP-Seq results.
We also identified YY1 binding site as NUP98-associated motif in ESCs and NeuPCs (Figure S5C). Both GAGA factor and YY1 have been linked to boundary activities, in line with the potential role of Nups in the compartmentalization of chromatin into active and silent domains [31], [34]–[36]. The binding motif of nuclear DEAF-1 related (NURD)/homolog to Drosophila DEAF-1 is also a NUP98-associated motif enriched in both ESCs and NeuPCs (Figure S5C). NURD displays homology to the protein SP100, a component of the promyelocytic leukemia-associated nuclear body, implying that NUP98 might be involved in the regulation of nuclear bodies and is consistent with the reported link of NUP98 to leukemia [37]–[39].
Moreover, we have found that in ESCs specifically, NUP98 binding sequences were enriched for motifs recognized by GC-Box factors SP1, C2H2 zinc finger transcription factors and SMAD (Figure S5C). These findings raise the exciting possibility that NUP98 is linked to the core transcription circuitry that is crucial for the maintenance of pluripotency in ESCs [40], [41].
NUP98 interacts with neural developmental genes specifically in neural progenitor cells
To further understand the dynamic DNA-binding behavior of NUP98, we investigated the functional categories of genes bound by NUP98 in ESCs and NeuPCs by gene ontology analysis. In ESCs, the top functional category enriched in NUP98 targets was found to be cytoskeleton organization (Figure 2B). This is consistent with recent reports showing that in Drosophila embryonic culture cells NUP98 binding targets were also enriched for cytoskeleton genes [17]. As discussed later (Figure S7), NUP98 targets in ESCs could be divided into two groups, one associated with active histone marks and one associated with silent histone marks. The active group of NUP98 targets in human ESCs was enriched for genes in the functional categories of cell cycle regulation, cell communication and metabolism. Such genes were also enriched in Drosophila NUP98 targets in embryonic cells [17] (and data not shown).
Interestingly, NUP98 targets were specifically enriched for neurogenesis genes in NeuPCs, including genes in functional categories of nervous system development, neuron projection development, and neuron development (Figure 2B). Examples of NUP98-interacting neurogenesis genes include NRG1, ERBB4, SOX5, and ROBO [42]–[44]. Furthermore, analysis of disease terms enriched in NUP98 targets in NeuPCs revealed that NUP98 is linked to genes involved in multiple diseases of the nervous system (Figure S6). Such diseases include neurodegenerative disorders such as Alzheimer disease and tumors such as glioma and neoplasms of the nerve tissue. The latter finding might be relevant for the previously reported role of NUP98 in tumorigenesis [39]. These results suggest that NUP98 is recruited to neural developmental genes in a developmentally controlled manner.
NUP98 binding correlates with developmental gene expression in neural progenitor cells
The specific association between NUP98 and neurogenesis genes in NeuPCs raised the possibility of a positive correlation between NUP98 binding and the activation of these genes during neural differentiation. To test this possibility, we compared the expression levels of genes bound by NUP98 to those of the same number of randomly selected genes in ESCs and NeuPCs using published RNA-Seq datasets [42], [43] (Figure 3A, 3B). We found that genes bound by NUP98 had higher expression levels in NeuPCs compared to randomly selected gene sets, suggesting that NUP98-binding was associated with elevated gene expression levels. As an independent test, we correlated the genomic localization of NUP98-binding regions to that of expressed mRNA in NeuPCs (Figure 3C). We were able to detect a positive correlation between the location of NUP98 binding on the genome and the location of mRNA production, indicating the positive correlation between NUP98 binding and mRNA expression.
Having established a link between NUP98 binding and active gene expression in NeuPCs, we asked if NUP98 binding to its target genes in NeuPCs would coincide with their transcriptional induction during neural differentiation. We found that NUP98-bound loci in NeuPCs had higher expression levels than either ESCs or IMR90 cells (Figure 3D). By contrast, for randomly selected genes, there was no statistically significant difference in expression levels in any of the analyzed cell types. Together, these findings support the notion that NUP98 gains association with developmental genes as they are undergoing transcriptional activation during development.
Considering all genes in the human genome, from published RNA-Seq datasets, there are a total of 8388 genes activated during differentiation of ESCs into NeuPCs. They were defined as genes whose expression levels were not detectable in ESCs but detectable in NeuPCs or were upregulated by more than two-folds in NeuPCs compared to ESCs [42], [43]. 2.7% of these genes gained NUP98 binding in NeuPCs compared to ESCs, suggesting that NUP98 is associated with specific subset of developmentally regulated genes.
In addition, we found 138 genes that lost NUP98 binding and also became inactivated in terms of expression levels upon differentiation from ESCs to NeuPCs. The expression levels of these genes were detectable in ESCs but undetectable in NeuPCs or were downregulated more than two-fold in NeuPCs compared to ESCs from published RNA-Seq datasets [42], [43]. This suggests that NUP98 might also be linked to active gene expresison in pluripotent cells.
NUP98 loses association with active chromatin domains in post-differentiation IMR90 cells
In contrast to the direct correlation between NUP98 binding and gene activation in NeuPCs, the scenario in ESCs appears more complicated. To gain additional insight into the type of chromatin environment that NUP98 interacts with, we compared NUP98 binding to the levels of different histone modifications by comparing our ChIP-Seq datasets to published ChIP-Seq datasets of histone modifications in ESCs [42]. Specifically, we examined H3K79me2 and H3K36me3 that are linked to active transcription, as well as H3K27me3 and H3K9me3 that are linked to repressed chromatin domains [44]. We compared histone modification levels for NUP98-binding regions and randomly selected regions as negative controls. We found that, in ESCs, NUP98 binding showed positive correlation with both active and silent histone marks. In contrast, NUP98 binding in IMR90 cells, which does not target promoter regions, was exclusively linked to high H3K9me3 levels (Figure 4). This observation is consistent with the idea that NUP98 is preferentially, if not exclusively, involved in developmental gene regulation in pluri-/multi-potent cells whereas in differentiated cells either associates with repressive chromatin (e.g. IMR90 cells) or lacks chromatin association altogether (e.g. neurons).
The finding that NUP98 associates with both active and silent chromatin domains in ESCs could be due to two reasons: 1) NUP98 is directed to bivalent domains that exhibit both active and silent histone marks or 2) there are two subsets of NUP98 targets, one active and one silent. To distinguish between these two possibilities, we determined the extent to which pairs of histone marks were found at NUP98 binding regions by Pearson's Correlation analysis (Figure S7A). Specifically, we examined the extent of correlation between 4 pairs of histone marks, H3K36me3 (active histone mark) - H3K27me3 (silent histone mark), H3K36me3 (active) -H3K9me3 (silent), H3K79me2 (active) - H3K27me3 (silent), and H3K79me2 (active) - H3K9me3 (silent). The result showed that the correlation between active and silent histone marks for NUP98 targets was low, suggesting NUP98-binding regions can be divided into at least two distinct subgroups, the group with active histone marks and the group with silent marks. In order to examine the types of genes included in each group, for each histone mark we ranked the genes bound by NUP98 by the levels of the histone mark found at that loci, selected the top 40% of the genes and performed gene ontology analysis on those genes (Figure S7B–S7D). We found that NUP98 targets with high levels of active histone marks (H3K79me2 or H3K36me3) were uniquely enriched for genes involved in macromolecule and nucleic acid metabolism and various aspects of the cell cycle such as nuclear division and mitosis. On the other hand, NUP98 targets, which were characterized by high levels of repressive histone mark H3K27me3, were uniquely enriched for genes involved in transmembrane transport. Furthermore, we confirmed that NUP98 targets with high levels of active histone marks were actively transcribed, whereas the ones with high levels of silent histone marks were repressed (Figure S7E–S7H). These observations are reminiscent of the findings in Drosophila embryonic culture cells in which NUP98 associates with both active and repressed genes as well as cell cycle and nucleic acid metabolism genes ([17]; (data not shown). Combining the observations in Drosophila and human cells, it is possible that NUP98 exhibits an evolutionally conserved role in associating with and potentially regulating cell cycle and nucleic acid metabolism genes.
Together these data suggest that in undifferentiated ESCs, NUP98 associates with one subgroup of active genes including cell cycle and nucleic acid metabolism genes as well as with one group of silent chromatin regions.
NUP98 functionally associates with genes involved in neural development
Since NUP98 associated with neural development genes during neural differentiation, we asked if this nuclear pore complex component plays a role in their expression. We randomly selected 24 genes from the 54 genes in the ‘nervous system development’ gene ontology category that showed specific enrichment in NeuPCs (Figure 2B) together with GAPDH as well as additional genes that did not bind NUP98 as negative controls, and examined how their expression levels were affected by NUP98 overexpression in neural progenitor cells using qRT-PCR (Figure 5A, 5B, Figure S8A). To do this, NeuPCs were transfected with NUP98 and the overexpressed NUP98 localized to both nuclear pores and nucleoplasm (Figure S9). Strikingly, we found that 12 NUP98-associated neural developmental genes showed statistically significant increase in expression levels upon NUP98 overexpression, indicating that NUP98 regulates the transcription of these genes. Since not all genes responded to NUP98 overexpression, we suspect that NUP98 might not be rate-limiting in all its target genes. We then overexpressed a fragment of NUP98 (amino acid 1–504) in NeuPCs, which lacks a C-terminal domain of NUP98 that is no longer capable of binding to the nuclear pore complex (Figure S9). We were interested in this region of NUP98 because this is the same fragment as appeared in multiple NUP98-involved leukemic fusions and this fragment has been found to interfere with the differentiation of haematopoietic progenitor cells [39]. Given reported evidences for a role of NUP98 in gene regulation [8], [17] and our observation of the association between NUP98 and developmental genes at the progenitor cell stage, we hypothesized that this NUP98 fragment might interfere with the expression of NUP98 targets required for neural differentiation. We found that overexpression of this fragment of NUP98 had a dominant negative effect on the expression of NUP98-binding neural developmental genes, and 20 of the 24 genes exhibited statistically significant decrease in expression levels (Figure 5C, 5D). No significant effects on gene expression have been observed for GAPDH as well as additional genes that did not bind NUP98 (Figure 5C, 5D, Figure S8B). This suggests that the C-terminal domain of NUP98 is required for the expression of NUP98 target genes because the fragment lacking this domain could not stimulate expression of target genes as the full length NUP98 protein did. As an additional negative control, we overexpressed NUP35 using the same vector and found no effects on the expression of NUP98-binding genes (Figure S10). We did not examine the effect of NUP98 knockdown on gene expression because NUP98 is encoded on the same mRNA with a core component of the nuclear pore, NUP96, which is essential to nuclear pore biogenesis [32]. Knockdown of NUP98 causes simultaneous knockdown of NUP96 and a failure in nuclear pore formation and cell death (data not shown). Therefore, it was not possible to specifically analyze the gene regulatory function of NUP98 from such knockdown experiments.
Collectively, these results indicate that NUP98 is functionally relevant for the expression of neural developmental genes it associates with in NeuPCs.
Expression level changes of NUP98 targets during neural differentiation
To obtain further insights into the role of NUP98 during differentiation we monitored the mRNA levels of 24 NUP98 target genes that were in the neural development gene ontology category through differentiation from ESCs to NeuPCs, and subsequently to postmitotic neurons in which Nup98 does not seem to bind the genome (Figure 6). We found that all 24 genes were upregulated when ESCs were differentiated to NeuPCs, consistent with the genome-wide correlation analysis and supporting a role of NUP98 in the induction of transcription (Figure 3D). When NeuPCs were further differentiated to neurons, the majority of genes (20 genes) showed continued transcriptional induction. Among those 20 genes, we focused on 6 genes that exhibited the most dramatic increase in expression in neurons. We observed that these genes could be largely divided into two groups (Figure 6). Group I genes (GRIK1, NRG1, and MAP2; colored in red) showed modest transcriptional induction in NeuPCs compared to ESCs. However, this cohort of genes underwent a robust increase in expression during the transition from NeuPCs to neurons. Group II genes (GPM6B, SOX5, and ERBB4; colored in green) underwent a dramatic activation in the initial commitment of ESCs to NeuPCs and only slight upregulation during subsequent neuronal differentiation. This suggests that NUP98 associates with both genes starting to be developmentally induced (Group I genes) and genes that are at a later stage of induction (Group II genes) in NeuPCs.
Group I and group II NUP98 targets exhibit distinct localization of genes
As a mobile nuclear pore complex component, NUP98 can act both at the nuclear pore complexes and inside the nucleus at sites that are not attached to the nuclear envelope (NE) [8], [17]. Therefore, we wondered if either of the two classes of genes is specifically associated with nuclear pore complexes at the NE. We examined the localization of the group I and group II NUP98 targets by immunofluorescence-fluorescence in situ hybridization (IF-FISH) experiments. We used lamin (LMNB) staining as a marker for the NE, and only counted FISH signals whose center overlaid with the NE (corresponding to <0.5 µm distance from the NE) as ‘periphery’ localization (Figure 7A). We found that the two groups of genes also showed distinct intranuclear localization at the progenitor cell stage. In NeuPCs, group I genes that will become transcriptionally active were localized to the periphery, whereas group II genes that were already expressed at high levels were in the interior of the nucleus (Figure 7B–7D, Figure S11). Upon differentiation into neurons, group I genes moved into the nuclear interior whereas group II genes maintained their interior localization (Figure 7B–7D, Figure S11).
In order to further confirm the association of group I genes with the nuclear pore complexes in NeuPCs, we tested the interaction of these genes with an additional nuclear pore component NUP133 by ChIP-qPCR. NUP133 is a scaffold component of the nuclear pore complexes that associates stably with the nuclear pores at the nuclear periphery [18]. It has not been observed at nuclear pore-free lamina sites or intranuclear sites at endogenous levels. We found that NUP133 bound the group I genes at the nuclear periphery, but not group II genes in the nucleoplasm (Figure S12A). As additional controls, for each group I gene, we selected two neighboring genes for a total of 6 genes (USP16, CLDN17, DCTN16, WRN, KCF7, and PTH2R) and observed no interaction between these genes and NUP98 or NUP133 by ChIP-qPCR (Figure S12A), further supporting the idea that the group I genes interacted with nuclear pores at the nuclear periphery in NeuPCs.
We also examined the intranuclear localization of the 6 neighboring genes (USP16, CLDN17, DCTN16, WRN, KCF7, and PTH2R) to study how far the peripheral localization extended from the group I genes. We found that the 6 genes exhibited large range of percentages of peripheral localization (from 10% to 60%) (Figure S12B). This suggests that NUP98 binding to a given gene at the nuclear periphery could not predict peripheral localization of flanking genes.
NUP98 regulates neuronal differentiation from neural progenitor cells
Given the association between NUP98 and neural developmental genes, we decided to test if overexpression of full length NUP98 and its dominant negative fragment in neural progenitor cells affected efficiency of neuronal differentiation. We examined the efficiency of neuronal differentiation by measuring the expression levels of markers for differentiated neurons (RBFox3, TUBB3, and Syn1) at the end of 1 month's neuronal differentiation from NeuPCs. We observed that overexpression of full length NUP98 increased expression of those neuronal markers, whereas overexpression of the dominant negative fragment decreased their expression levels (Figure S13). This is consistent with the findings that overexpression of full length NUP98 increased expression of neural developmental genes, whereas overexpression of the fragment reduced expression of such genes (Figure 5). Collectively these results suggest that NUP98 regulates the efficiency of neuronal differentiation from neural progenitor cells. Based on these observations, we conclude that at the neural progenitor stage, there are at least two modes of gene regulation by NUP98, 1) the ‘gene to pore’ model where genes relocate to the nuclear pore at the initial stage of transcriptional induction associated with neurogenesis; and 2) the ‘Nup to gene’ model where NUP98 acts away from the nuclear pore to interact with genes that are highly activated (Figure 7E).
Discussion
In addition to their well established role in mediating transport across the NE, nuclear pore proteins have been implicated in directly regulating gene expression in organisms as diverse as yeast and Drosophila [4], [8]–[13], [16], [17], [20]. However, the functions of Nups during development, especially their roles in gene regulation and in higher organisms such as humans, remain largely unexplored. Here we provide evidence that in human cells, the nuclear pore protein NUP98 binds the nuclear genome in a manner that is tightly linked to differentiation status and developmental gene expression. In embryonic stem cells, NUP98 bound genes include an active subgroup such as genes involved in cell cycle and nucleic acid metabolism regulation and a silent subgroup. In neural progenitor cells, NUP98 shows distinct association with genes activated during neural development, and NUP98 is functionally important for the expression of these genes. In the lung fibroblast IMR90 cells NUP98 mainly interacts with silent chromatin domains. This suggests that besides controlling nucleo-cytoplasmic exchange, NUPs can dynamically interact with the human genome during differentiation, providing an additional layer of genome regulation during development.
From a cell biological point of view, there are at least two modes of developmental gene regulation by NUP98, the ‘on-pore’ regulation and the ‘off-pore’ regulation. Our findings suggest that at least one of the distinctions of the two modes of regulation might be related to the temporal gene expression dynamics of NUP98 targets. Specifically, during the differentiation of human embryonic stem cells along the neural lineage, nuclear pore-tethered NUP98 acts as a short-term anchoring point for certain developmental genes at the beginning stages of transcription induction.
In progenitor cells, anchorage at the nuclear pores could be especially important for genes at the initial stages of developmental induction because for these genes the activation status may not be stable yet and therefore require the microenvironment of the nuclear pores to maintain chromatin decondensation and gene transcriptional status, especially through repeated cell cycles such as in neural progenitor cells (discussed below). On the other hand, for genes that are at later stages of developmental induction, the chromatin is entirely open and thus does not require the nuclear pore-tethering mechanism to maintain transcription. Under such circumstances, the nuclear interior might be a more optimal microenvironment for those genes that supports robust transcription compared to the nuclear pores which are in proximity to the nuclear lamina which can mediate transcriptional repression [45], [46].
The rationale for the involvement of the nuclear pores in developmental gene regulation, especially at the progenitor stage, probably relates to the necessity of re-establishing chromatin organization after nuclear envelope breakdown and reformation in mitosis. During M phase of the cell cycle, chromatin is condensed, transcription activities are largely diminished and most transcription factors are absent from mitotic chromosomes, which composes a window that allows for cell fate reprogramming [47]–[49]. Therefore, in progenitor cells, upon mitosis exit, chromatin has to be decondensed in a manner that faithfully restores the ‘open’ or ‘closed’ states for different chromatin domains to ensure that corresponding developmental genes can be activated or repressed correctly. Nups are prime candidates to regulate transcription re-initiation of developmental genes based on ‘transcriptional memory’ from previous cell cycles because during mitosis exit, Nups are among the first proteins to establish contacts with chromatin and it has been found that proper chromatin decondensation requires the functioning of Nups [50]–[53]. Furthermore, association with Nups in yeast has been shown to convey a ‘gene memory’ function so that genes can be rapidly re-induced for repeated transcription stimulation cycles [12], [54]. Along these lines of evidence, NUP98 in Drosophila is involved in the re-initiation of transcription after heat shock [8] and our study has shown that in the cycling human neural progenitor cells NUP98 associates with and regulates expression of neural development genes. Together these observations point to the role of Nups in the rapid and faithful re-initiation of expression of developmental genes after each mitosis cycle.
In the search for DNA sequences that might direct NUP98-chromatin interaction, we identified a conserved DNA binding motif, the GA boxes. This motif is overrepresented in NUP98-binding sequences not only in human cells from our study, but also in Drosophila cells from published ChIP-chip and Dam-ID datasets. In Drosophila, GA-boxes are recognized by the GAGA factor, which is encoded by the Trithorax-like gene and is required for the proper development of the organism [33]. Interestingly, GAGA factor has been related to the yeast factor Rap1 because of their similarities in binding to both repetitive sequences and transcriptionally active genes as well as exhibiting boundary activity [33], and the Rap1 binding site has been identified as the nuclear-pore recognizing DNA motif in yeast [10]. Together these lines of evidence suggest that the DNA recognition activity of Nups or Nup-interacting partners is evolutionarily conserved.
Finally, the involvement of NUP98 in developmental regulation sheds light on its involvement in multiple types of leukemia where it is fused to various transcription regulators [39]. Such oncogenic NUP98-fusion proteins have been shown to promote the self-renewal of hematopoietic progenitor cells and inhibit their differentiation [55]. We found that NUP98 is connected to the regulation of genes implicated in neoplasm formation especially at the progenitor stage. In addition, overexpression of the NUP98 fragment as appeared in the fusion proteins disrupted the expression of endogenous NUP98 targets which, during normal differentiation processes, were activated. Therefore, the misregulation of developmental genes in hematopoietic cells due to genomic fusion of NUP98 with transcription regulators may be a potential mechanism driving the transformation events in NUP98-fusion protein associated leukemias.
Materials and Methods
Ethics statement
Work involving embryonic stem cells was carried out in accordance with the policies set by the Salk Institute.
Cell culture
Human embryonic stem cell line HUES6 were grown under feeder-free conditions in mTeSR1 medium. HUES6-derived neural progenitor cells were grown in DMEM/F12 supplemented with N2/B27. Early passage IMR90 cells were grown in DMEM, 15% FBS and MEM nonessential amino acids. Culture and differentiation conditions were detailed in Text S1.
Antibodies
Primary antibodies used include rabbit anti-human NUP98 polyclonal antibody (Cell Signaling 2292; ‘NUP98Ab1’ specified in the experiment), rabbit anti-human NUP98 monoclonal antibody (Cell Signaling 2598), mAb414 (Covance MMS-120R), normal rabbit IgG (Cell Signaling 2729), anti-human Nestin antibody (Chemicon), anti-Sox2 antibody (Chemicon), and rabbit-anti-LMNB antibody (Aviva ARP46357-P050).
ChIP–Seq and analysis of sequencing data
Cells were fixed in 1% formaldehyde (Polysciences) for 10 min. Fixation was stopped by adding glycine to a final concentration of 125 mM. Fixed cells were lysed and sonicated. DNA was immunoprecipitated, eluted, de-crosslinked, treated with RNase and protease, and purified. Procedures were detailed in Text S1. Library was constructed using Illumina ChIP-Seq DNA sample prep kit and sequencing was done on Illumina GAII. Mapping and peak calling of ChIP-Seq data, annotation of NUP98-binding regions, mapping and expression level analysis of RNA-Seq data, transcription factor motif analysis, gene ontology analysis, positional correlation of ChIP-Seq and RNA-Seq were conducted using the Genomatix software. Peak calling was based on Audic-Claverie algorithm for NGSAnalyzer. Chromosomal views of ChIP-Seq data were generated using Affymetrix Integrated Genome Browser and correlation of NUP98 binding with gene expression levels and histone modification levels was performed using the R package for statistical computing.
Immunofluorescence–fluorescent in situ hybridization (IF–FISH)
FISH probes were DIG-labelled using the DIG-Nick translation mix for in situ probes (Roche). Cells were fixed, immuno-stained, permeablized, denatured in 50% formamide/2xSSC for 30 min at 80°C, hybridized to DIG-labeled FISH probes overnight at 42°C, stained with anti-DIG antibody (Roche) and Hoechst and mounted. Procedures were detailed in Text S1. Three-dimensional image stacks were recorded with Zeiss LSM710 scanning scope using a 63× objective, 512×512 resolution, 2× averaging and optimal interval (0.31 µm) between stacks in Z-direction and three-dimensional images were reconstructed from the Z-stack images.
Overexpression and RNAi of NUPs
For NUP overexpression, plasmids were electroporated into NeuPCs using rat neural stem cell Nucleofector solution (Lonza Amaxa, VPG-1005) or (in differentiation assays) packaged into lentiviruses that were used subsequently to infect NeuPCs. NUP98 was knocked down by siRNA (oligo sequence: GAG AGA GAT TTA GTT TCC TAA GCA A) in IMR90 cells using Dharmafect 1 siRNA transfection reagent according to the manufacturer's instructions.
Supporting Information
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Štítky
Genetika Reprodukčná medicínaČlánok vyšiel v časopise
PLOS Genetics
2013 Číslo 2
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