4.8 Article

Developmental Control of Polycomb Subunit Composition by GATA Factors Mediates a Switch to Non-Canonical Functions

Journal

MOLECULAR CELL
Volume 57, Issue 2, Pages 304-316

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.molcel.2014.12.009

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NIH
  2. NIDDK [K01DK093543, R03DK101665]

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Polycomb repressive complex 2 (PRC2) plays crucial roles in transcriptional regulation and stem cell development. However, the context-specific functions associated with alternative subunits remain largely unexplored. Here we show that the related enzymatic subunits EZH1 and EZH2 undergo an expression switch during blood cell development. An erythroid-specific enhancer mediates transcriptional activation of EZH1, and a switch from GATA2 to GATA1 controls the developmental EZH1/2 switch by differential association with EZH1 enhancers. We further examine the in vivo stoichiometry of the PRC2 complexes by quantitative proteomics and reveal the existence of an EZH1-SUZ12 subcomplex lacking EED. EZH1 together with SUZ12 form a non-canonical PRC2 complex, occupy active chromatin, and positively regulate gene expression. Loss of EZH2 expression leads to repositioning of EZH1 to EZH2 targets. Thus, the lineage-and developmental stage-specific regulation of PRC2 subunit composition leads to a switch from canonical silencing to non-canonical functions during blood stem cell specification.

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