4.8 Article

ONECUT2 regulates RANKL-dependent enterocyte and microfold cell differentiation in the small intestine; a multi-omics study

Journal

NUCLEIC ACIDS RESEARCH
Volume 51, Issue 3, Pages 1277-1296

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/nar/gkac1236

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In this study, a multi-omics approach was used to investigate the molecular mechanisms driving M cell differentiation in mouse small intestinal organoids. Cell type-specific regulatory elements and associated transcription factors were identified through chromatin accessibility changes and transcription factor dynamics. The transcription factor ONECUT2 was found to play a role in enterocyte differentiation and restrict M cell lineage specification.
Microfold (M) cells reside in the intestinal epithelium of Peyer's patches (PP). Their unique ability to take up and transport antigens from the intestinal lumen to the underlying lymphoid tissue is key in the regulation of the gut-associated immune response. Here, we applied a multi-omics approach to investigate the molecular mechanisms that drive M cell differentiation in mouse small intestinal organoids. We generated a comprehensive profile of chromatin accessibility changes and transcription factor dynamics during in vitro M cell differentiation, allowing us to uncover numerous cell type-specific regulatory elements and associated transcription factors. By using single-cell RNA sequencing, we identified an enterocyte and M cell precursor population. We used our newly developed computational tool SCEPIA to link precursor cell-specific gene expression to transcription factor motif activity in cis-regulatory elements, uncovering high expression of and motif activity for the transcription factor ONECUT2. Subsequent in vitro and in vivo perturbation experiments revealed that ONECUT2 acts downstream of the RANK/RANKL signalling axis to support enterocyte differentiation, thereby restricting M cell lineage specification. This study sheds new light on the mechanism regulating cell fate balance in the PP, and it provides a powerful blueprint for investigation of cell fate switches in the intestinal epithelium.

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