Polyamines regulate cell fate by altering the activity of histone-modifying enzymes

Author:

Emmons-Bell MayaORCID,Forsyth GraceORCID,Sundquist AbbyORCID,Oldeman SylvieORCID,Gardikioti AngelikiORCID,de Souza RoshniORCID,Coene JonathanORCID,Kamel Maryam H.ORCID,Ayyapan Shine,Fuchs Harrison A.ORCID,Verhelst StevenORCID,Smeeton JoannaORCID,Musselman Catherine A.ORCID,Schvartzman Juan-ManuelORCID

Abstract

AbstractPolyamines are polycationic alkyl-amines abundant in proliferating stem and cancer cells. How these metabolites influence numerous cellular functions remains unclear. Here we show that polyamine levels decrease during differentiation and that inhibiting polyamine synthesis leads to a differentiated-like cell state. Polyamines concentrate in the nucleus and are further enriched in the nucleoli of cells in culture andin vivo. Loss of polyamines drives changes in chromatin accessibility that correlate with altered histone post-translational modifications. Polyamines interact electrostatically with DNA on the nucleosome core, stabilizing histone tails in conformations accessible to modifying enzymes. These data reveal a mechanism by which an abundant metabolite influences chromatin structure and function in a non-sequence specific manner, facilitating chromatin remodeling during reprogramming and limiting it during fate commitment.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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