4.7 Article

BAF subunit switching regulates chromatin accessibility to control cell cycle exit in the developing mammalian cortex

Journal

GENES & DEVELOPMENT
Volume 35, Issue 5-6, Pages 335-353

Publisher

COLD SPRING HARBOR LAB PRESS, PUBLICATIONS DEPT
DOI: 10.1101/gad.342345.120

Keywords

[ BAF complex; cell cycle exit; cell type-specific transcriptional networks; chromatin accessibility; cortical development; neurogenesis]

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [NS046789]
  2. Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI)
  3. UCSF Program for Breakthrough Biomedical Research, Sandler Foundation
  4. Sir James Black GSK fellowship
  5. UCSF Sandler Faculty Fellows Program
  6. Larry L. Hillblom Foundation

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Loss of the neural development-related BAF subunit BAF53a leads to cell cycle arrest and disruption of neurogenesis due to altered chromatin accessibility, which inhibits the binding of specific neural transcription factors and suppresses cell cycle gene expression, highlighting a novel mechanism regulating neural progenitor cell cycle exit in the presence of extrinsic proliferative cues.
mSWI/SNF or BAF chromatin regulatory complexes are dosage-sensitive regulators of human neural development frequently mutated in autism spectrum disorders and intellectual disability. Cell cycle exit and differentiation of neural stem/progenitor cells is accompanied by BAF subunit switching to generate neuron-specific nBAF complexes. We manipulated the timing of BAF subunit exchange in vivo and found that early loss of the npBAF subunit BAF53a stalls the cell cycle to disrupt neurogenesis. Loss of BAF53a results in decreased chromatin accessibility at specific neural transcription factor binding sites, including the pioneer factors SOX2 and ASCL1, due to Polycomb accumulation. This results in repression of cell cycle genes, thereby blocking cell cycle progression and differentiation. Cell cycle block upon Baf53a deletion could be rescued by premature expression of the nBAF subunit BAF53b but not by other major drivers of proliferation or differentiation. WNT, EGF, bFGF, SOX2, c-MYC, or PAX6 all fail to maintain proliferation in the absence of BAF53a, highlighting a novel mechanism underlying neural progenitor cell cycle exit in the continued presence of extrinsic proliferative cues.

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