4.8 Article

SMRT-mediated repression of an H3K27 demethylase in progression from neural stem cell to neuron

Journal

NATURE
Volume 450, Issue 7168, Pages 415-U8

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NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nature06270

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A series of transcription factors critical for maintenance of the neural stem cell state have been identified(1-3), but the role of functionally important corepressors(4-7) in maintenance of the neural stem cell state and early neurogenesis remains unclear. Previous studies have characterized the expression of both SMRT ( also known as NCoR2, nuclear receptor co-repressor 2) and NCoR in a variety of developmental systems(8); however, the specific role of the SMRT corepressor in neurogenesis is still to be determined. Here we report a critical role for SMRT in forebrain development and in maintenance of the neural stem cell state. Analysis of a series of markers in SMRT-gene-deleted mice revealed the functional requirement of SMRT in the actions of both retinoic-acid-dependent and Notch-dependent forebrain development. In isolated cortical progenitor cells, SMRT was critical for preventing retinoic-acid-receptor- dependent induction of differentiation along a neuronal pathway in the absence of any ligand. Our data reveal that SMRT represses expression of the jumonji-domain containing gene JMJD3, a direct retinoic-acid-receptor target that functions as a histone H3 trimethyl K27 demethylase and which is capable of activating specific components of the neurogenic program.

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