Kinetic networks identify TWIST2 as a key regulatory node in adipogenesis

Author:

Dutta Arun B.ORCID,Lank Daniel S.,Przanowska Roza K.ORCID,Przanowski PiotrORCID,Wang Lixin,Nguyen Bao,Walavalkar Ninad M.,Duarte Fabiana M.ORCID,Guertin Michael J.ORCID

Abstract

Adipocytes contribute to metabolic disorders such as obesity, diabetes, and atherosclerosis. Prior characterizations of the transcriptional network driving adipogenesis have overlooked transiently acting transcription factors (TFs), genes, and regulatory elements that are essential for proper differentiation. Moreover, traditional gene regulatory networks provide neither mechanistic details about individual regulatory element–gene relationships nor temporal information needed to define a regulatory hierarchy that prioritizes key regulatory factors. To address these shortcomings, we integrate kinetic chromatin accessibility (ATAC-seq) and nascent transcription (PRO-seq) data to generate temporally resolved networks that describe TF binding events and resultant effects on target gene expression. Our data indicate which TF families cooperate with and antagonize each other to regulate adipogenesis. Compartment modeling of RNA polymerase density quantifies how individual TFs mechanistically contribute to distinct steps in transcription. The glucocorticoid receptor activates transcription by inducing RNA polymerase pause release, whereas SP and AP-1 factors affect RNA polymerase initiation. We identifyTwist2as a previously unappreciated effector of adipocyte differentiation. We find that TWIST2 acts as a negative regulator of 3T3-L1 and primary preadipocyte differentiation. We confirm thatTwist2knockout mice have compromised lipid storage within subcutaneous and brown adipose tissue. Previous phenotyping ofTwist2knockout mice and Setleis syndromeTwist2/patients noted deficiencies in subcutaneous adipose tissue. This network inference framework is a powerful and general approach for interpreting complex biological phenomena and can be applied to a wide range of cellular processes.

Funder

Center for Scientific Review

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

Subject

Genetics (clinical),Genetics

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