Progesterone receptor mediates ovulatory transcription through RUNX transcription factor interactions and chromatin remodelling

Author:

Dinh Doan T1ORCID,Breen James23,Nicol Barbara4ORCID,Foot Natalie J1,Bersten David C1,Emery Alaknanda1,Smith Kirsten M1,Wong Ying Y1,Barry Simon C1,Yao Humphrey H C4,Robker Rebecca L1,Russell Darryl L1

Affiliation:

1. Robinson Research Institute, School of Biomedicine, Faculty of Health & Medical Sciences, University of Adelaide , Australia

2. Indigenous Genomics, Telethon Kids Institute , Adelaide , Australia

3. College of Health & Medicine, Australian National University , Canberra , Australia

4. Reproductive Developmental Biology Group, National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, Research Triangle Park , NC  27709, USA

Abstract

Abstract Progesterone receptor (PGR) plays diverse roles in reproductive tissues and thus coordinates mammalian fertility. In the ovary, rapid acute induction of PGR is the key determinant of ovulation through transcriptional control of a unique set of genes that culminates in follicle rupture. However, the molecular mechanisms for this specialized PGR function in ovulation is poorly understood. We have assembled a detailed genomic profile of PGR action through combined ATAC-seq, RNA-seq and ChIP-seq analysis in wildtype and isoform-specific PGR null mice. We demonstrate that stimulating ovulation rapidly reprograms chromatin accessibility in two-thirds of sites, correlating with altered gene expression. An ovary-specific PGR action involving interaction with RUNX transcription factors was observed with 70% of PGR-bound regions also bound by RUNX1. These transcriptional complexes direct PGR binding to proximal promoter regions. Additionally, direct PGR binding to the canonical NR3C motif enable chromatin accessibility. Together these PGR actions mediate induction of essential ovulatory genes. Our findings highlight a novel PGR transcriptional mechanism specific to ovulation, providing new targets for infertility treatments or new contraceptives that block ovulation.

Funder

Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation

NHMRC

National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics

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