4.3 Article

Prolonged FOS activity disrupts a global myogenic transcriptional program by altering 3D chromatin architecture in primary muscle progenitor cells

Journal

SKELETAL MUSCLE
Volume 12, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s13395-022-00303-x

Keywords

Muscle satellite cells; Muscle progenitor cells; FOS; AP-1; Myogenic differentiation; Hi-C; Topologically associated domains (TADs); gene loops

Categories

Funding

  1. Glenn Foundation for Medical Research
  2. NIH [ES024935, AG048917]
  3. Postdoctoral Enrichment Award from the Burroughs Wellcome Fund
  4. NIH Diversity Supplement award [AG048917]
  5. NIH Training Grant Award [5T32DK007260]
  6. USC Dean's pilot grant

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The study reveals that elevated FOS activity in muscle progenitor cells severely hinders cellular differentiation and myotube formation, while also altering chromatin organization near pro-myogenic genes. This highlights the crucial importance of tightly controlling FOS expression in the muscle lineage.
Background The AP-1 transcription factor, FBJ osteosarcoma oncogene (FOS), is induced in adult muscle satellite cells (SCs) within hours following muscle damage and is required for effective stem cell activation and muscle repair. However, why FOS is rapidly downregulated before SCs enter cell cycle as progenitor cells (i.e., transiently expressed) remains unclear. Further, whether boosting FOS levels in the proliferating progeny of SCs can enhance their myogenic properties needs further evaluation. Methods We established an inducible, FOS expression system to evaluate the impact of persistent FOS activity in muscle progenitor cells ex vivo. We performed various assays to measure cellular proliferation and differentiation, as well as uncover changes in RNA levels and three-dimensional (3D) chromatin interactions. Results Persistent FOS activity in primary muscle progenitor cells severely antagonizes their ability to differentiate and form myotubes within the first 2 weeks in culture. RNA-seq analysis revealed that ectopic FOS activity in muscle progenitor cells suppressed a global pro-myogenic transcriptional program, while activating a stress-induced, mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) transcriptional signature. Additionally, we observed various FOS-dependent, chromosomal re-organization events in A/B compartments, topologically associated domains (TADs), and genomic loops near FOS-regulated genes. Conclusions Our results suggest that elevated FOS activity in recently activated muscle progenitor cells perturbs cellular differentiation by altering the 3D chromosome organization near critical pro-myogenic genes. This work highlights the crucial importance of tightly controlling FOS expression in the muscle lineage and suggests that in states of chronic stress or disease, persistent FOS activity in muscle precursor cells may disrupt the muscle-forming process.

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