Wilde Jonathan J, Siegenthaler Julie A, Dent Sharon Y R, Niswander Lee A
Graduate Program in Cell Biology, Stem Cells, and Development, University of Colorado Denver, Aurora, Colorado 80045,
Department of Pediatrics, Section of Developmental Biology, University of Colorado School of Medicine, Anschutz Medical Campus, Aurora, Colorado 80045, and.
J Neurosci. 2017 Mar 8;37(10):2565-2579. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2121-16.2017. Epub 2017 Feb 2.
Diencephalic defects underlie an array of neurological diseases. Previous studies have suggested that retinoic acid (RA) signaling is involved in diencephalic development at late stages of embryonic development, but its roles and mechanisms of action during early neural development are still unclear. Here we demonstrate that mice lacking enzymatic activity of the acetyltransferase GCN5 (( )), which were previously characterized with respect to their exencephalic phenotype, exhibit significant diencephalic expansion, decreased diencephalic RA signaling, and increased diencephalic WNT and SHH signaling. Using a variety of molecular biology techniques in both cultured neuroepithelial cells treated with a GCN5 inhibitor and forebrain tissue from ( ) embryos, we demonstrate that GCN5, RARα/γ, and the poorly characterized protein TACC1 form a complex in the nucleus that binds specific retinoic acid response elements in the absence of RA. Furthermore, RA triggers GCN5-mediated acetylation of TACC1, which results in dissociation of TACC1 from retinoic acid response elements and leads to transcriptional activation of RA target genes. Intriguingly, RA signaling defects caused by inhibition of GCN5 can be rescued through RA-dependent mechanisms that require RARβ. Last, we demonstrate that the diencephalic expansion and transcriptional defects seen in ( ) mutants can be rescued with gestational RA supplementation, supporting a direct link between GCN5, TACC1, and RA signaling in the developing diencephalon. Together, our studies identify a novel, nonhistone substrate for GCN5 whose modification regulates a previously undescribed, tissue-specific mechanism of RA signaling that is required to restrict diencephalic size during early forebrain development. Changes in diencephalic size and shape, as well as SNPs associated with retinoic acid (RA) signaling-associated genes, have been linked to neuropsychiatric disorders. However, the mechanisms that regulate diencephalic morphogenesis and the involvement of RA signaling in this process are poorly understood. Here we demonstrate a novel role of the acetyltransferase GCN5 in a previously undescribed mechanism of RA signaling in the developing forebrain that is required to maintain the appropriate size of the diencephalon. Together, our experiments identify a novel nonhistone substrate of GCN5, highlight an essential role for both GCN5 and RA signaling in early diencephalic development, and elucidate a novel molecular regulatory mechanism for RA signaling that is specific to the developing forebrain.
间脑缺陷是一系列神经疾病的基础。先前的研究表明,视黄酸(RA)信号在胚胎发育后期参与间脑发育,但其在早期神经发育过程中的作用和作用机制仍不清楚。在这里,我们证明缺乏乙酰转移酶GCN5(( ))酶活性的小鼠(先前已根据其无脑表型进行了表征)表现出明显的间脑扩张、间脑RA信号降低以及间脑WNT和SHH信号增加。在使用GCN5抑制剂处理的培养神经上皮细胞和( )胚胎的前脑组织中,我们使用多种分子生物学技术证明,GCN5、RARα/γ和特征不明确的蛋白质TACC1在细胞核中形成复合物,该复合物在没有RA的情况下结合特定的视黄酸反应元件。此外,RA触发GCN5介导的TACC1乙酰化,这导致TACC1从视黄酸反应元件上解离,并导致RA靶基因的转录激活。有趣的是,通过需要RARβ的RA依赖性机制可以挽救由GCN5抑制引起的RA信号缺陷。最后,我们证明在( )突变体中看到的间脑扩张和转录缺陷可以通过孕期补充RA来挽救,这支持了GCN5、TACC1和发育中的间脑RA信号之间的直接联系。总之,我们的研究确定了一种新的GCN5非组蛋白底物,其修饰调节了一种以前未描述的、组织特异性的RA信号机制,该机制在早期前脑发育过程中限制间脑大小是必需的。间脑大小和形状的变化,以及与视黄酸(RA)信号相关基因相关的单核苷酸多态性,都与神经精神疾病有关。然而,调节间脑形态发生的机制以及RA信号在此过程中的参与情况仍知之甚少。在这里,我们证明了乙酰转移酶GCN5在发育中的前脑RA信号的一种以前未描述的机制中具有新作用,该机制对于维持间脑的适当大小是必需的。总之,我们的实验确定了一种新的GCN5非组蛋白底物,突出了GCN5和RA信号在早期间脑发育中的重要作用,并阐明了一种特定于发育中的前脑的RA信号新分子调节机制。