4.8 Article

CRISPR screening uncovers a central requirement for HHEX in pancreatic lineage commitment and plasticity restriction

Journal

NATURE CELL BIOLOGY
Volume 24, Issue 7, Pages 1064-+

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41556-022-00946-4

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Funding

  1. DoD PRMRP [W81XWH-20-1-0670, W81XWH-20-1-0298]
  2. NIH [UC4DK104211, UC4DK108120, R01DK096239, U01HG012051]
  3. American Diabetes Association [1-19-IBS-125]
  4. Leona M. and Harry B. Helmsley Charitable Trust
  5. JDRF [3-SRA-2021-1060-S-B]
  6. University of Wisconsin-Madison
  7. Office of the Vice Chancellor for Research and Graduate Education
  8. Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation
  9. Leukemia Research Foundation (Hollis Brownstein New Investigator Research Grant)
  10. AFAR (Sagol Network GerOmics award)
  11. Deerfield (Xseed award)
  12. NIH Office of the Director [1S10OD030286-01]
  13. MSKCC Cancer Center Support Grant from the NIH [P30CA008748]
  14. NYSTEM training grant [DOH01-TRAIN3-2015-2016-00006]
  15. NIH T32 Training Grants [T32HD060600, T32GM008539]
  16. Frank Lappin Horsfall Jr Fellowship

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The pancreas and liver originate from a common pool of progenitors. The transcription factor HHEX plays a key role in pancreatic lineage specification, cooperating with other pioneer factors to promote pancreas development and restrict activation of alternative lineages.
The pancreas and liver arise from a common pool of progenitors. However, the underlying mechanisms that drive their lineage diversification from the foregut endoderm are not fully understood. To tackle this question, we undertook a multifactorial approach that integrated human pluripotent-stem-cell-guided differentiation, genome-scale CRISPR-Cas9 screening, single-cell analysis, genomics and proteomics. We discovered that HHEX, a transcription factor (TF) widely recognized as a key regulator of liver development, acts as a gatekeeper of pancreatic lineage specification. HHEX deletion impaired pancreatic commitment and unleashed an unexpected degree of cellular plasticity towards the liver and duodenum fates. Mechanistically, HHEX cooperates with the pioneer TFs FOXA1, FOXA2 and GATA4, shared by both pancreas and liver differentiation programmes, to promote pancreas commitment, and this cooperation restrains the shared TFs from activating alternative lineages. These findings provide a generalizable model for how gatekeeper TFs like HHEX orchestrate lineage commitment and plasticity restriction in broad developmental contexts.

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