4.8 Article

Directed Evolution of an Enhanced POU Reprogramming Factor for Cell Fate Engineering

Journal

MOLECULAR BIOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
Volume 38, Issue 7, Pages 2854-2868

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/molbev/msab075

Keywords

reprogramming; protein engineering; POU; cell fate conversion; molecular evolution; transcription factor

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31771454]
  2. Research Grants Council of Hong Kong General Research Fund (RGC/GRF) projects [17128918, 17101120]
  3. Health and Medical Research Fund [06174006]
  4. Germany/Hong Kong Joint Research Scheme - Research Grants Council of Hong Kong
  5. German Academic Exchange Service [G-HKU701/18]

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Transcription factor-driven cell fate engineering requires efficiency, speed, and maturity for clinical translation. Directed evolution led to the discovery of an artificially evolved POU factor (ePOU) that surpasses Oct4 in reprogramming efficacy. ePOU can induce pluripotency with or without Sox2, has altered DNA binding preferences, and accelerates pluripotency network establishment.
Transcription factor-driven cell fate engineering in pluripotency induction, transdifferentiation, and forward reprogramming requires efficiency, speed, and maturity for widespread adoption and clinical translation. Here, we used Oct4, Sox2, Klf4, and c-Myc driven pluripotency reprogramming to evaluate methods for enhancing and tailoring cell fate transitions, through directed evolution with iterative screening of pooled mutant libraries and phenotypic selection. We identified an artificially evolved and enhanced POU factor (ePOU) that substantially outperforms wild-type Oct4 in terms of reprogramming speed and efficiency. In contrast to Oct4, not only can ePOU induce pluripotency with Sox2 alone, but it can also do so in the absence of Sox2 in a three-factor ePOU/Klf4/c-Myc cocktail. Biochemical assays combined with genomewide analyses showed that ePOU possesses a new preference to dimerize on palindromic DNA elements. Yet, the moderate capacity of Oct4 to function as a pioneer factor, its preference to bind octamer DNA and its capability to dimerize with Sox2 and Sox17 proteins remain unchanged in ePOU. Compared with Oct4, ePOU is thermodynamically stabilized and persists longer in reprogramming cells. In consequence, ePOU: 1) differentially activates several genes hitherto not implicated in reprogramming, 2) reveals an unappreciated role of thyrotropin-releasing hormone signaling, and 3) binds a distinct class of retrotransposons. Collectively, these features enable ePOU to accelerate the establishment of the pluripotency network. This demonstrates that the phenotypic selection of novel factor variants from mammalian cells with desired properties is key to advancing cell fate conversions with artificially evolved biomolecules.

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