作者
Masahiro Nagano,Bo Hu,Shihori Yokobayashi,Akitoshi Yamamura,Fumiya Umemura,Mariel Coradin,Hiroshi Ohta,Yukihiro Yabuta,Yukiko Ishikura,Ikuhiro Okamoto,Hiroki Ikeda,Naofumi Kawahira,Yoshiaki Nosaka,Sakura Shimizu,Yôji Kojima,Ken Mizuta,Tomoko Kasahara,Yusuke Imoto,Killian Meehan,Roman R. Stocsits,Gordana Wutz,Yasuaki Hiraoka,Yuji Murakawa,Takuya Yamamoto,Kikuë Tachibana,Jan-Michel Peters,Leonid A. Mirny,Benjamin A. García,Jacek Majewski,Mitinori Saitou
摘要
Germ cells are unique in engendering totipotency, yet the mechanisms underlying this capacity remain elusive. Here, we perform comprehensive and in-depth nucleome analysis of mouse germ-cell development in vitro, encompassing pluripotent precursors, primordial germ cells (PGCs) before and after epigenetic reprogramming, and spermatogonia/spermatogonial stem cells (SSCs). Although epigenetic reprogramming, including genome-wide DNA de-methylation, creates broadly open chromatin with abundant enhancer-like signatures, the augmented chromatin insulation safeguards transcriptional fidelity. These insulatory constraints are then erased en masse for spermatogonial development. Notably, despite distinguishing epigenetic programming, including global DNA re-methylation, the PGCs-to-spermatogonia/SSCs development entails further euchromatization. This accompanies substantial erasure of lamina-associated domains, generating spermatogonia/SSCs with a minimal peripheral attachment of chromatin except for pericentromeres-an architecture conserved in primates. Accordingly, faulty nucleome maturation, including persistent insulation and improper euchromatization, leads to impaired spermatogenic potential. Given that PGCs after epigenetic reprogramming serve as oogenic progenitors as well, our findings elucidate a principle for the nucleome programming that creates gametogenic progenitors in both sexes, defining a basis for nuclear totipotency.