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A spatio-temporally constrained gene regulatory network directed by PBX1/2 acquires limb patterning specificity via HAND2
- Losa, Marta;
- Barozzi, Iros;
- Osterwalder, Marco;
- Hermosilla-Aguayo, Viviana;
- Morabito, Angela;
- Chacón, Brandon H;
- Zarrineh, Peyman;
- Girdziusaite, Ausra;
- Benazet, Jean Denis;
- Zhu, Jianjian;
- Mackem, Susan;
- Capellini, Terence D;
- Dickel, Diane;
- Bobola, Nicoletta;
- Zuniga, Aimée;
- Visel, Axel;
- Zeller, Rolf;
- Selleri, Licia
- et al.
Published Web Location
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-39443-zAbstract
A lingering question in developmental biology has centered on how transcription factors with widespread distribution in vertebrate embryos can perform tissue-specific functions. Here, using the murine hindlimb as a model, we investigate the elusive mechanisms whereby PBX TALE homeoproteins, viewed primarily as HOX cofactors, attain context-specific developmental roles despite ubiquitous presence in the embryo. We first demonstrate that mesenchymal-specific loss of PBX1/2 or the transcriptional regulator HAND2 generates similar limb phenotypes. By combining tissue-specific and temporally controlled mutagenesis with multi-omics approaches, we reconstruct a gene regulatory network (GRN) at organismal-level resolution that is collaboratively directed by PBX1/2 and HAND2 interactions in subsets of posterior hindlimb mesenchymal cells. Genome-wide profiling of PBX1 binding across multiple embryonic tissues further reveals that HAND2 interacts with subsets of PBX-bound regions to regulate limb-specific GRNs. Our research elucidates fundamental principles by which promiscuous transcription factors cooperate with cofactors that display domain-restricted localization to instruct tissue-specific developmental programs.
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