Litcius/Paper detail

Symmetric inheritance of parental histones governs epigenome maintenance and embryonic stem cell identity

Alice Wenger, Alva Biran, Nicolás Alcaraz, Alba Redó Riveiro, Annika Charlotte Sell, Robert Krautz, Valentin Flury, Nazaret Reverón-Gómez, Victor Solis‐Mezarino, Moritz Völker-Albert, Axel Imhof, Robin Andersson, Joshua M. Brickman, Anja Groth

2023Nature Genetics79 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Modified parental histones are segregated symmetrically to daughter DNA strands during replication and can be inherited through mitosis. How this may sustain the epigenome and cell identity remains unknown. Here we show that transmission of histone-based information during DNA replication maintains epigenome fidelity and embryonic stem cell plasticity. Asymmetric segregation of parental histones H3-H4 in MCM2-2A mutants compromised mitotic inheritance of histone modifications and globally altered the epigenome. This included widespread spurious deposition of repressive modifications, suggesting elevated epigenetic noise. Moreover, H3K9me3 loss at repeats caused derepression and H3K27me3 redistribution across bivalent promoters correlated with misexpression of developmental genes. MCM2-2A mutation challenged dynamic transitions in cellular states across the cell cycle, enhancing naïve pluripotency and reducing lineage priming in G1. Furthermore, developmental competence was diminished, correlating with impaired exit from pluripotency. Collectively, this argues that epigenetic inheritance of histone modifications maintains a correctly balanced and dynamic chromatin landscape able to support mammalian cell differentiation.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyEpigenomeEmbryonic stem cellInheritance (genetic algorithm)HistoneGeneticsStem cellEpigeneticsIdentity (music)Cell biologyGeneDNA methylationGene expressionPhysicsAcousticsEpigenetics and DNA MethylationGenomics and Chromatin DynamicsCRISPR and Genetic Engineering