4.8 Article

A Single TCF Transcription Factor, Regardless of Its Activation Capacity, Is Sufficient for Effective Trilineage Differentiation of ESCs

Journal

CELL REPORTS
Volume 20, Issue 10, Pages 2424-2438

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2017.08.043

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Funding

  1. Canadian Institutes of Health Research [MOP133610]
  2. Canada Research Chairs Program
  3. Ontario Ministry of Research and Innovation
  4. Canada Foundation for Innovation
  5. OCRiT Project: Ontario Ministry of Economic Development and Innovation
  6. Ontario Ministry of Training, Colleges and Universities

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Co-expression and cross-regulation of the four TCF/LEFs render their redundant and unique functions ambiguous. Here, we describe quadruple-knockout (QKO) mouse ESCs lacking all full-length TCF/LEFs and cell lines rescued with TCF7 or TCF7L1. QKO cells self-renew, despite gene expression patterns that differ significantly from WT, and display delayed, neurectoderm-biased, embryoid body (EB) differentiation. QKO EBs have no contracting cardiomyocytes and differentiate poorly into mesendoderm but readily generate neuronal cells. QKO cells and TCF7L1-rescued cells cannot efficiently activate TCF reporters, whereas TCF7-rescued cells exhibit significant reporter responsiveness. Surprisingly, despite dramatically different transactivation capacities, re-expression of TCF7L1 or TCF7 in QKO cells restores their tri-lineage differentiation ability, with similar lineage marker expression patterns and beating cardiomyocyte frequencies observed in EBs. Both factors also similarly affect the transcriptome of QKO cells. Our data reveal that a single TCF, regardless of its activation capacity, is sufficient for effective trilineage differentiation of ESCs.

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