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The emergence of Sox and POU transcription factors predates the origins of animal stem cells

Ya Gao, Daisylyn Senna Tan, Mathias Girbig, Haoqing Hu, Xiaomin Zhou, Qianwen Xie, SC Yeung, Kin Shing Lee, Sik Yin Ho, Vlad Cojocaru, Jian Yan, Georg Hochberg, Alex de Mendoza, Ralf Jauch

2024Nature Communications17 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Stem cells are a hallmark of animal multicellularity. Sox and POU transcription factors are associated with stemness and were believed to be animal innovations, reported absent in their unicellular relatives. Here we describe unicellular Sox and POU factors. Choanoflagellate and filasterean Sox proteins have DNA-binding specificity similar to mammalian Sox2. Choanoflagellate—but not filasterean—Sox can replace Sox2 to reprogram mouse somatic cells into induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) through interacting with the mouse POU member Oct4. In contrast, choanoflagellate POU has a distinct DNA-binding profile and cannot generate iPSCs. Ancestrally reconstructed Sox proteins indicate that iPSC formation capacity is pervasive among resurrected sequences, thus loss of Sox2-like properties fostered Sox family subfunctionalization. Our findings imply that the evolution of animal stem cells might have involved the exaptation of a pre-existing set of transcription factors, where pre-animal Sox was biochemically similar to extant Sox, whilst POU factors required evolutionary innovations. The pluripotency program is maintained by transcription factors from the Sox and POU families. Here they identify SOX and POU factors from unicellular relatives of animals and show that unicellular SOX can replace SOX2 to induce pluripotency, whilst unicellular POU differs from OCT4.

Topics & Concepts

POU domainTranscription factorBiologyStem cellGeneticsEvolutionary biologyComputational biologyCell biologyGeneHomeoboxPluripotent Stem Cells ResearchDevelopmental Biology and Gene RegulationCancer Cells and Metastasis