4.8 Article

Two Distinct E2F Transcriptional Modules Drive Cell Cycles and Differentiation

Journal

CELL REPORTS
Volume 27, Issue 12, Pages 3547-+

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2019.05.004

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Funding

  1. OSUCCC Genetically Engineered Mouse Modeling, Genomics, Analytical Cytometry Core Shared Resources
  2. Campus Microscopy and Imaging Facility at The Ohio State University
  3. HCC Cellular Microscopy Imaging Facility at the Medical University of South Carolina
  4. National Cancer Institute, Bethesda, MD [P30 CA138313]
  5. NIH [R01CA121275]
  6. Chan Zuckerberg Initiative DAF grant [2019-198009]
  7. [P30 CA016058]

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Orchestrating cell-cycle-dependent mRNA oscillations is critical to cell proliferation in multicellular organisms. Even though our understanding of cell-cycle-regulated transcription has improved significantly over the last three decades, the mechanisms remain untested in vivo. Unbiased transcriptomic profiling of G(0), G(1)-S, and S-G(2)-M sorted cells from FUCCI mouse embryos suggested a central role for E2Fs in the control of cell-cycle-dependent gene expression. The analysis of gene expression and E2F-tagged knockin mice with tissue imaging and deep-learning tools suggested that post-transcriptional mechanisms universally coordinate the nuclear accumulation of E2F activators (E2F3A) and canonical (E2F4) and atypical (E2F8) repressors during the cell cycle in vivo. In summary, we mapped the spatiotemporal expression of sentinel E2F activators and canonical and atypical repressors at the single-cell level in vivo and propose that two distinct E2F modules relay the control of gene expression in cells actively cycling (E2F3A-8-4) and exiting the cycle (E2F3A-4) during mammalian development.

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