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Bmi1 facilitates primitive endoderm formation by stabilizing Gata6 during early mouse development.

TitleBmi1 facilitates primitive endoderm formation by stabilizing Gata6 during early mouse development.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2012
AuthorsLavial F, Bessonnard S, Ohnishi Y, Tsumura A, Chandrashekran A, Fenwick MA, Tomaz RA, Hosokawa H, Nakayama T, Chambers I, Hiiragi T, Chazaud C, Azuara V
JournalGenes Dev
Volume26
Issue13
Pagination1445-58
Date Published2012 Jul 1
ISSN1549-5477
KeywordsAnimals, Cell Lineage, Endoderm, GATA6 Transcription Factor, Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental, Homeodomain Proteins, Mice, Nuclear Proteins, Pluripotent Stem Cells, Polycomb Repressive Complex 1, Proto-Oncogene Proteins, Repressor Proteins, Transcription, Genetic
Abstract

The transcription factors Nanog and Gata6 are critical to specify the epiblast versus primitive endoderm (PrE) lineages. However, little is known about the mechanisms that regulate the protein stability and activity of these factors in the developing embryo. Here we uncover an early developmental function for the Polycomb group member Bmi1 in supporting PrE lineage formation through Gata6 protein stabilization. We show that Bmi1 is enriched in the extraembryonic (endoderm [XEN] and trophectodermal stem [TS]) compartment and repressed by Nanog in pluripotent embryonic stem (ES) cells. In vivo, Bmi1 overlaps with the nascent Gata6 and Nanog protein from the eight-cell stage onward before it preferentially cosegregates with Gata6 in PrE progenitors. Mechanistically, we demonstrate that Bmi1 interacts with Gata6 in a Ring finger-dependent manner to confer protection against Gata6 ubiquitination and proteasomal degradation. A direct role for Bmi1 in cell fate allocation is established by loss-of-function experiments in chimeric embryoid bodies. We thus propose a novel regulatory pathway by which Bmi1 action on Gata6 stability could alter the balance between Gata6 and Nanog protein levels to introduce a bias toward a PrE identity in a cell-autonomous manner.

DOI10.1101/gad.188193.112
Alternate JournalGenes Dev.
PubMed ID22713603
PubMed Central IDPMC3403013
Grant List / / Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council / United Kingdom