Generation of human excitatory forebrain neurons by cooperative binding of proneural NGN2 and homeobox factor EMX1

Author:

Ang Cheen Euong123,Olmos Victor Hipolito23,Vodehnal Kayla23ORCID,Zhou Bo2345,Lee Qian Yi123,Sinha Rahul3ORCID,Narayanaswamy Aadit23ORCID,Mall Moritz23ORCID,Chesnov Kirill23,Dominicus Caia S.67,Südhof Thomas45,Wernig Marius23

Affiliation:

1. Department of Bioengineering, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305

2. Department of Pathology, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305

3. Institute of Stem Cell and Regenerative Medicine, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305

4. HHMI, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305

5. Department of Molecular and Cellular Physiology, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305

6. Wellcome Sanger Institute, Hinxton, Cambridgeshire CB10 1SA, United Kingdom

7. OpenTargets, Hinxton, Cambridgeshire CB10 1SA, United Kingdom

Abstract

Generation of defined neuronal subtypes from human pluripotent stem cells remains a challenge. The proneural factor NGN2 has been shown to overcome experimental variability observed by morphogen-guided differentiation and directly converts pluripotent stem cells into neurons, but their cellular heterogeneity has not been investigated yet. Here, we found that NGN2 reproducibly produces three different kinds of excitatory neurons characterized by partial coactivation of other neurotransmitter programs. We explored two principle approaches to achieve more precise specification: prepatterning the chromatin landscape that NGN2 is exposed to and combining NGN2 with region-specific transcription factors. Unexpectedly, the chromatin context of regionalized neural progenitors only mildly altered genomic NGN2 binding and its transcriptional response and did not affect neurotransmitter specification. In contrast, coexpression of region-specific homeobox factors such as EMX1 resulted in drastic redistribution of NGN2 including recruitment to homeobox targets and resulted in glutamatergic neurons with silenced nonglutamatergic programs. These results provide the molecular basis for a blueprint for improved strategies for generating a plethora of defined neuronal subpopulations from pluripotent stem cells for therapeutic or disease-modeling purposes.

Funder

HHS | NIH | National Institute of Mental Health

HHS | NIH | National Institute of General Medical Sciences

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Reference56 articles.

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