Litcius/Paper detail

GEMC1 and MCIDAS interactions with SWI/SNF complexes regulate the multiciliated cell-specific transcriptional program

Michael R. Lewis, Berta Terré, Philip A. Knobel, Tao Cheng, Hao Lu, Camille Stephan‐Otto Attolini, J. Smak, Étienne Coyaud, Isabel Garcı́a-Cao, Shalu Sharma, Chithran Vineethakumari, Jessica Querol, Gabriel Gil‐Gómez, Gabriele Piergiovanni, Vincenzo Costanzo, Sandra Peiró, Brian Raught, Haotian Zhao, Xavier Salvatella, Sudipto Roy, Moe R. Mahjoub, Travis H. Stracker

2023Cell Death and Disease16 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Multiciliated cells (MCCs) project dozens to hundreds of motile cilia from their apical surface to promote the movement of fluids or gametes in the mammalian brain, airway or reproductive organs. Differentiation of MCCs requires the sequential action of the Geminin family transcriptional activators, GEMC1 and MCIDAS, that both interact with E2F4/5-DP1. How these factors activate transcription and the extent to which they play redundant functions remains poorly understood. Here, we demonstrate that the transcriptional targets and proximal proteomes of GEMC1 and MCIDAS are highly similar. However, we identified distinct interactions with SWI/SNF subcomplexes; GEMC1 interacts primarily with the ARID1A containing BAF complex while MCIDAS interacts primarily with BRD9 containing ncBAF complexes. Treatment with a BRD9 inhibitor impaired MCIDAS-mediated activation of several target genes and compromised the MCC differentiation program in multiple cell based models. Our data suggest that the differential engagement of distinct SWI/SNF subcomplexes by GEMC1 and MCIDAS is required for MCC-specific transcriptional regulation and mediated by their distinct C-terminal domains.

Topics & Concepts

Motile ciliumBiologyTranscription factorCell biologyCiliogenesisSWI/SNFCiliumTranscriptional regulationTranscription (linguistics)Regulation of gene expressionARID1ACell fate determinationCellular differentiationGeneGeneticsMutationChromatin remodelingLinguisticsPhilosophyChromatin Remodeling and CancerGenomics and Chromatin DynamicsEpigenetics and DNA Methylation