Abstract

The superfamily of basic-Helix-Loop-Helix (bHLH) transcription factors influence cell fate in all three embryonic germ layers, and the tissue-specific class II factors have received prominent attention for their potent ability to direct differentiation during development and in cellular reprogramming. The activity of many class II bHLH proteins driving differentiation, and the inhibitory class VI bHLH factor Hes1, is controlled by phosphorylation on multiple sites by Cyclin-dependent kinases (Cdks). As class II proteins are generally thought to be active through hetero-dimerisation with the ubiquitously expressed class I E proteins, regulation of class I transcription factors such as E47 may influence the activity of multiple tissue-specific bHLH proteins. Using differentiation of nerve and muscle in Xenopus frog embryos as a model system, we set out to explore whether with the ubiquitously expressed class I E protein E47 that hetero-dimerises with Class II bHLHs to control their activity, is also regulated by multi-site phosphorylation. We demonstrate that E47 can be readily phosphorylated by Cdks on multiple sites in vitro, while ectopically-expressed E47 exists in multiple phosphorylated forms in Xenopus embryos. Preventing multi-site phosphorylation using a phospho-mutant version of E47 enhances the neurogenic and myogenic activity of three different class II bHLH reprogramming factors, and also when E47 acts in hetero-dimerisation with endogenous proteins. Mechanistically, unlike phospho-regulation of class II bHLH factors, we find that preventing phosphorylation of E47 increases the amount of chromatin-bound E47 protein but without affecting its overall protein stability. Thus, multi-site phosphorylation is a conserved regulatory mechanism across the bHLH superfamily that can be manipulated to enhance cellular differentiation.

Highlights

  • Basic-Helix-Loop-Helix proteins comprise a large superfamily of transcriptional regulators that are found in almost all eukaryotes, acting in the three embryonic germ layers as master regulators of cell fate [1]

  • We find that E47 is phosphorylated in Xenopus embryos on up to 13 conserved Serine/Threonine Proline (SP/TP)

  • E47 is phosphorylated in vitro by CyclinA/Cdk2 and CyclinB/Cdk1, suggesting potential regulation during the G2/M phase of the cell cycle, we note that there is no measure of relative kinase activity against another independent substrate making it hard to draw firm conclusions about kinase specificity from this experiment

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Summary

Introduction

Basic-Helix-Loop-Helix (bHLH) proteins comprise a large superfamily of transcriptional regulators that are found in almost all eukaryotes, acting in the three embryonic germ layers as master regulators of cell fate [1]. Accumulating evidence points to a conserved mechanism of multi-site phospho-regulation of these key class II bHLH reprogramming factors, including Ascl, Ngn, NeuroD4, MyoD and Ngn: Their ability to drive differentiation is directly suppressed when Cyclin-dependent kinase (Cdk) activity is high, and preventing bHLH protein phosphorylation enhances lineage specific differentiation both in vitro and in vivo [4,5,6,7,8]. A similar mode of phospho-regulation has been shown to control the activity of Hes, a class VI bHLH protein that suppresses differentiation, indicating that multi-site phosphorylation may play a broad role in controlling activity of bHLH transcriptional regulators [9]. Class II bHLH proteins are generally thought to be active through hetero-dimerisation with the ubiquitously expressed class I E proteins such as Drosophila daughterless and mammalian HEB, E2-2, E12 and E47 [1]. As ubiquitous heterodimerisation partners, E proteins have the ability to regulate the activity of multiple tissuespecific bHLH proteins

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