Abstract
Pax6 encodes a specific DNA-binding transcription factor that regulates the development of multiple organs, including the eye, brain and pancreas. Previous studies have shown that Pax6 regulates the entire process of ocular lens development. In the developing forebrain, Pax6 is expressed in ventricular zone precursor cells and in specific populations of neurons; absence of Pax6 results in disrupted cell proliferation and cell fate specification in telencephalon. In the pancreas, Pax6 is essential for the differentiation of α-, β- and δ-islet cells. To elucidate molecular roles of Pax6, chromatin immunoprecipitation experiments combined with high-density oligonucleotide array hybridizations (ChIP-chip) were performed using three distinct sources of chromatin (lens, forebrain and β-cells). ChIP-chip studies, performed as biological triplicates, identified a total of 5,260 promoters occupied by Pax6. 1,001 (133) of these promoter regions were shared between at least two (three) distinct chromatin sources, respectively. In lens chromatin, 2,335 promoters were bound by Pax6. RNA expression profiling from Pax6+/− lenses combined with in vivo Pax6-binding data yielded 76 putative Pax6-direct targets, including the Gaa, Isl1, Kif1b, Mtmr2, Pcsk1n, and Snca genes. RNA and ChIP data were validated for all these genes. In lens cells, reporter assays established Kib1b and Snca as Pax6 activated and repressed genes, respectively. In situ hybridization revealed reduced expression of these genes in E14 cerebral cortex. Moreover, we examined differentially expressed transcripts between E9.5 wild type and Pax6−/− lens placodes that suggested Efnb2, Fat4, Has2, Nav1, and Trpm3 as novel Pax6-direct targets. Collectively, the present studies, through the identification of Pax6-direct target genes, provide novel insights into the molecular mechanisms of Pax6 gene control during mouse embryonic development. In addition, the present data demonstrate that Pax6 interacts preferentially with promoter regions in a tissue-specific fashion. Nevertheless, nearly 20% of the regions identified are accessible to Pax6 in multiple tissues.
Highlights
A fundamental feature of gene regulation during embryonic development is an extensive utilization of combinatorial mechanisms that ensure proper temporal and spatial control of gene expression [1]
We reasoned that parallel studies of multiple tissues/cells regulated by Pax6, such as lens, forebrain and cultured b-cells of pancreas, would increase our power to identify tissue-specific as well as shared Pax6-dependent regulatory pathways
To identify regions occupied by Pax6 in chromatin prepared from newborn lenses, E15 forebrain and pancreatic b-cells, we used GeneChip Mouse Promoter 1.0R Arrays (Affymetrix), which contain over 28,000 mouse promoters
Summary
A fundamental feature of gene regulation during embryonic development is an extensive utilization of combinatorial mechanisms that ensure proper temporal and spatial control of gene expression [1]. The combinatorial regulatory mechanism at the ‘‘ground’’ level employs specific combinations of lineage-restricted sequencespecific DNA-binding transcription factors to control cell-specific gene regulatory networks [3,4,5]. Pax (paired box 6) is a lineage-specific DNA-binding transcription factor that regulates development of the central nervous system, endocrine pancreas, eye and olfactory system [7,8,9,10,11,12,13]. Understanding of genetic networks downstream of Pax genes is essential for better understanding of embryonic development and mechanism of human congenital diseases
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