生物
SOX2
生殖系
生殖细胞
遗传学
诱导多能干细胞
干细胞
基因
细胞生物学
转录因子
胚胎干细胞
作者
Wenteng He,Qing Luo,Jian Zhao,Mengting Wang,Allan Z. Zhao,Luohua Feng,Ahmed Reda,Eva Lindgren,Jan‐Bernd Stukenborg,Jiayu Chen,Qiaolin Deng
标识
DOI:10.1002/advs.202410533
摘要
Klinefelter syndrome (KS), characterized by the presence of at least one extra X-chromosome, is a common cause of male infertility. However, the mechanism underlying the failure of germline specification is not well studied. Intriguingly, the differentiation efficiency of female human pluripotent stem cells (hPSCs) is often lower than that of male. This study investigates how X-linked gene dosage affects human primordial germ cell-like cells (hPGCLCs) specification in both healthy and diseased conditions. This work reveals that X-linked genes play a multifaceted role against the fate competency to hPGCLCs, with escape genes IGSF1 and CHRDL1 inhibiting the TGF-beta/Activin A and BMP pathways, respectively. Notably, this work identifies a previously unrecognized role of SOX2, upregulated by the escape gene USP9X, elucidating a species-specific function in the mammalian germline. The USP9X-SOX2 regulatory axis profoundly influenced cellular metabolism, mitochondrial morphology, and progenitor competence in hPGCLCs specification. Furthermore, the inability to downregulate SOX2 and upregulate SOX17 in response to BMP signaling impedes downstream gene activation due to motif binding competition. These findings shed novel insights into the human germline specification by elucidating the divergent roles of SOX2 versus SOX17 in mammals, influenced by X-linked gene dosage effects. These results offer potential applications for improving the induction efficiency of hPGCLCs, facilitating disease mechanistic studies.
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