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GATA6 mutations in hiPSCs inform mechanisms for maldevelopment of the heart, pancreas, and diaphragm

Arun Sharma, Lauren K. Wasson, Jon A. L. Willcox, Sarah U. Morton, Joshua Gorham, Daniel M. DeLaughter, Meraj Neyazi, Manuel Schmid, Radhika Agarwal, Min Young Jang, Christopher N. Toepfer, Tarsha Ward, Yuri Kim, Alexandre C. Pereira, Steven R. DePalma, Angela C. Tai, Seong Won Kim, David A. Conner, Daniel Bernstein, Bruce D. Gelb, Wendy K. Chung, Elizabeth Goldmuntz, George A. Porter, Martin Tristani‐Firouzi, Deepak Srivastava, Jonathan G. Seidman, Christine E. Seidman

2020eLife63 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Damaging GATA6 variants cause cardiac outflow tract defects, sometimes with pancreatic and diaphragmic malformations. To define molecular mechanisms for these diverse developmental defects, we studied transcriptional and epigenetic responses to GATA6 loss of function (LoF) and missense variants during cardiomyocyte differentiation of isogenic human induced pluripotent stem cells. We show that GATA6 is a pioneer factor in cardiac development, regulating SMYD1 that activates HAND2, and KDR that with HAND2 orchestrates outflow tract formation. LoF variants perturbed cardiac genes and also endoderm lineage genes that direct PDX1 expression and pancreatic development. Remarkably, an exon 4 GATA6 missense variant, highly associated with extra-cardiac malformations, caused ectopic pioneer activities, profoundly diminishing GATA4 , FOXA1/2, and PDX1 expression and increasing normal retinoic acid signaling that promotes diaphragm development. These aberrant epigenetic and transcriptional signatures illuminate the molecular mechanisms for cardiovascular malformations, pancreas and diaphragm dysgenesis that arise in patients with distinct GATA6 variants.

Topics & Concepts

GATA6BiologyGATA4PDX1GeneticsHeart developmentMissense mutationCell biologyCancer researchMutationGeneTranscription factorEmbryonic stem cellCongenital heart defects researchCongenital Heart Disease StudiesCongenital Diaphragmatic Hernia Studies