Prc1 prevents replication stress during chondrogenic transit amplification

  • Frank Spaapen
  • , Lars M.T. Eijssen
  • , Michiel E. Adriaens
  • , Tim J. Welting
  • , Peggy Prickaerts
  • , Juliette Salvaing
  • , Vivian E.H. Dahlmans
  • , Donald A.M. Surtel
  • , Frans Kruitz
  • , Roel Kuijer
  • , Yoshihiro Takihara
  • , Hendrik Marks
  • , Hendrik G. Stunnenberg
  • , Bradly G. Wouters
  • , Miguel Vidal
  • , Jan Willem Voncken

Onderzoeksoutput: Bijdrage aan tijdschriftArtikelpeer review

1 Citaat (Scopus)

Samenvatting

Transit amplification (TA), a state of combined, rapid proliferative expansion and differentiation of stem cell-descendants, remains poorly defined at the molecular level. The Polycomb Repressive Complex 1 (PRC1) protein BMI1 has been localized to TA compartments, yet its exact role in TA is unclear. PRC1 proteins control gene expression, cell proliferation and DNA-damage repair. Coordination of such DNA-templated activities during TA is predicted to be crucial to support DNA replication and differentiation-associated transcriptional programming. We here examined whether chondrogenesis provides a relevant biological context for synchronized coordination of these chromatin-based tasks by BMI1. Taking advantage of a prominently featuring TA-phase during chondrogenesis in vitro and in vivo, we here report that TA is completely dependent on intact PRC1 function. BMI1-depleted chondrogenic progenitors rapidly accumulate double strand DNA breaks during DNA replication, present massive non-H3K27me3-directed transcriptional deregulation and fail to undergo chondrogenic TA. Genome-wide accumulation of Topoisomerase 2α and Geminin suggests a model in which PRC1 synchronizes replication and transcription during rapid chondrogenic progenitor expansion. Our combined data reveals for the first time a vital cell-autonomous role for PRC1 during chondrogenesis. We provide evidence that chondrocyte hyper-replication and hypertrophy represent a unique example of programmed senescence in vivo. These findings provide new perspectives on PRC1 function in development and disease.

Originele taal-2Engels
Artikelnummer22
TijdschriftEpigenomes
Volume1
Nummer van het tijdschrift3
DOI's
StatusGepubliceerd - dec. 2017
Extern gepubliceerdJa

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