4.8 Article

The conserved sex regulator DMRT1 recruits SOX9 in sexual cell fate reprogramming

Journal

NUCLEIC ACIDS RESEARCH
Volume 49, Issue 11, Pages 6144-6164

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/nar/gkab448

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [5 R01 GM59152, 1 R01 GM127379, 1 F32GM106484, IRACDA K126M119955]
  2. Minnesota Medical Foundation
  3. University of Minnesota Medical School

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The study highlighted the importance of the sex regulator DMRT1 and the maintenance of cell fate in sexual development, showing that DMRT1 can reprogram female granulosa cells into Sertoli-like cells in vivo and in culture. These findings reveal the key roles of chromatin state, gene expression, and different growth factors in the process of sexual cell differentiation.
Mammalian sexual development commences when fetal bipotential progenitor cells adopt male Sertoli (in XY) or female granulosa (in XX) gonadal cell fates. Differentiation of these cells involves extensive divergence in chromatin state and gene expression, reflecting distinct roles in sexual differentiation and gametogenesis. Surprisingly, differentiated gonadal cell fates require active maintenance through postnatal life to prevent sexual transdifferentiation and female cell fate can be reprogrammed by ectopic expression of the sex regulator DMRT1. Here we examine how DMRT1 reprograms granulosa cells to Sertoli-like cells in vivo and in culture. We define postnatal sex-biased gene expression programs and identify three-dimensional chromatin contacts and differentially accessible chromatin regions (DARs) associated with differentially expressed genes. Using a conditional transgene we find DMRT1 only partially reprograms the ovarian transcriptome in the absence of SOX9 and its paralog SOX8, indicating that these factors functionally cooperate with DMRT1. ATAC-seq and ChIP-seq show that DMRT1 induces formation of many DARs that it binds with SOX9, and DMRT1 is required for binding of SOX9 at most of these. We suggest that DMRT1 can act as a pioneer factor to open chromatin and allow binding of SOX9, which then cooperates with DMRT1 to reprogram sexual cell fate.

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