A cell-type specific surveillance complex represses cryptic promoters during differentiation in an adult stem cell lineage
Listed in
This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.Abstract
Regulators of chromatin accessibility play key roles in cell fate transitions, triggering onset of novel transcription programs as cells differentiate. In the Drosophila male germ line stem cell lineage, tMAC, a master regulator of spermatocyte differentiation that binds thousands of loci, is required for local opening of chromatin, allowing activation of spermatocyte-specific promoters. Here we show that a cell-type specific surveillance system involving the multiple zinc finger protein Kmg and the pipsqueak domain protein Dany dampens transcriptional output from weak tMAC dependent promoters and blocks tMAC binding at thousands of additional cryptic promoters, thus preventing massive expression of aberrant protein-coding transcripts. ChIP-seq showed Kmg enriched at the tMAC-bound promoters it repressed, consistent with direct action. In contrast, Kmg and Dany did not repress highly expressed tMAC dependent genes, where they colocalized with their binding partner, the chromatin modeler Mi-2 (NuRD), along the transcribed regions rather than at the promoter. Mi-2 has been shown to preferentially bind RNA over chromatin (Ullah et al . 2022). We propose that at highly expressed genes binding of Mi-2 to the abundant nascent RNA pulls the Kmg/Dany complex away from promoters, providing a mechanism to effectively repress ectopic promoters while protecting robust transcription.