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Reduced chromatin accessibility correlates with resistance to Notch activation

Published version
Peer-reviewed

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Authors

van den Ameele, Jelle 
Krautz, Robert 
Cheetham, Seth W 
Donovan, Alex PA 
Llorà-Batlle, Oriol 

Abstract

Abstract: The Notch signalling pathway is a master regulator of cell fate transitions in development and disease. In the brain, Notch promotes neural stem cell (NSC) proliferation, regulates neuronal migration and maturation and can act as an oncogene or tumour suppressor. How NOTCH and its transcription factor RBPJ activate distinct gene regulatory networks in closely related cell types in vivo remains to be determined. Here we use Targeted DamID (TaDa), requiring only thousands of cells, to identify NOTCH and RBPJ binding in NSCs and their progeny in the mouse embryonic cerebral cortex in vivo. We find that NOTCH and RBPJ associate with a broad network of NSC genes. Repression of NSC-specific Notch target genes in intermediate progenitors and neurons correlates with decreased chromatin accessibility, suggesting that chromatin compaction may contribute to restricting NOTCH-mediated transactivation.

Description

Funder: Royal Society; doi: https://doi.org/10.13039/501100000288


Funder: Herchel Smith Fund

Keywords

Article, /631/136/142, /631/136/368, /45/100, /45/22, /45/23, /64/60, /14/19, /13/51, article

Journal Title

Nature Communications

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

2041-1723

Volume Title

13

Publisher

Nature Publishing Group UK
Sponsorship
Wellcome Trust (Wellcome) (103792, 105839)