MSL2 ensures biallelic gene expression in mammals

Sun, Yidan and Wiese, Meike and Hmadi, Raed and Karayol, Remzi and Seyfferth, Janine and Martinez Greene, Juan Alfonso and Erdogdu, Niyazi Umut and Deboutte, Ward and Arrigoni, Laura and Holz, Herbert and Renschler, Gina and Hirsch, Naama and Foertsch, Arion and Basilicata, Maria Felicia and Stehle, Thomas and Shvedunova, Maria and Bella, Chiara and Pessoa Rodrigues, Cecilia and Schwalb, Bjoern and Cramer, Patrick and Manke, Thomas and Akhtar, Asifa (2023) MSL2 ensures biallelic gene expression in mammals. Nature, 624 (7990). pp. 173-181. ISSN 0028-0836

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Abstract

In diploid organisms, biallelic gene expression enables the production of adequate levels of mRNA1,2. This is essential for haploinsufficient genes, which require biallelic expression for optimal function to prevent the onset of developmental disorders1,3. Whether and how a biallelic or monoallelic state is determined in a cell-type-specific manner at individual loci remains unclear. MSL2 is known for dosage compensation of the male X chromosome in flies. Here we identify a role of MSL2 in regulating allelic expression in mammals. Allele-specific bulk and single-cell analyses in mouse neural progenitor cells revealed that, in addition to the targets showing biallelic downregulation, a class of genes transitions from biallelic to monoallelic expression after MSL2 loss. Many of these genes are haploinsufficient. In the absence of MSL2, one allele remains active, retaining active histone modifications and transcription factor binding, whereas the other allele is silenced, exhibiting loss of promoter–enhancer contacts and the acquisition of DNA methylation. Msl2-knockout mice show perinatal lethality and heterogeneous phenotypes during embryonic development, supporting a role for MSL2 in regulating gene dosage. The role of MSL2 in preserving biallelic expression of specific dosage-sensitive genes sets the stage for further investigation of other factors that are involved in allelic dosage compensation in mammalian cells, with considerable implications for human disease.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: Pustaka Library > Geological Science
Depositing User: Unnamed user with email support@pustakalibrary.com
Date Deposited: 14 Dec 2023 11:11
Last Modified: 14 Dec 2023 11:11
URI: http://archive.bionaturalists.in/id/eprint/2149

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