4.5 Article

Potential interactions between the TBX4-FGF10 and SHH-FOXF1 signaling during human lung development revealed using ChIP-seq

Journal

RESPIRATORY RESEARCH
Volume 22, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12931-021-01617-y

Keywords

Transcriptional regulation; Motif enrichment; Lung morphogenesis

Funding

  1. US National Institutes of Health (NIH)
  2. National Heart Lung and Blood Institute (NHLBI) [R01HL137203]
  3. National Science Centre in Poland [2019/35/D/NZ5/02896]

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The study reveals the complexity of the transcriptional network driven by TBX2 and TBX4, demonstrating that disruption of this interaction during morphogenesis may play a significant role in the etiology of lung developmental disorders.
BackgroundThe epithelial-mesenchymal signaling involving SHH-FOXF1, TBX4-FGF10, and TBX2 pathways is an essential transcriptional network operating during early lung organogenesis. However, precise regulatory interactions between different genes and proteins in this pathway are incompletely understood.MethodsTo identify TBX2 and TBX4 genome-wide binding sites, we performed chromatin immunoprecipitation followed by next-generation sequencing (ChIP-seq) in human fetal lung fibroblasts IMR-90.ResultsWe identified 14,322 and 1,862 sites strongly-enriched for binding of TBX2 and TBX4, respectively, 43.95% and 18.79% of which are located in the gene promoter regions. Gene Ontology, pathway enrichment, and DNA binding motif analyses revealed a number of overrepresented cues and transcription factor binding motifs relevant for lung branching that can be transcriptionally regulated by TBX2 and/or TBX4. In addition, TBX2 and TBX4 binding sites were found enriched around and within FOXF1 and its antisense long noncoding RNA FENDRR, indicating that the TBX4-FGF10 cascade may directly interact with the SHH-FOXF1 signaling.ConclusionsWe highlight the complexity of transcriptional network driven by TBX2 and TBX4 and show that disruption of this crosstalk during morphogenesis can play a substantial role in etiology of lung developmental disorders.

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