Foxh1 is a locus-specific PRC2 recruiter governing germ layer silencing

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Abstract

Polycomb Repressive Complex 2 (PRC2) establishes H3K27me3 marks to shape spatiotemporal gene expression during embryogenesis. While its dysregulation is linked to developmental disorders, cancer, and aging, the mechanisms guiding PRC2 to specific genomic loci remain a subject of ongoing debate. A prevailing model proposes that PRC2 recruitment occurs via its intrinsic affinity for chromatin rather than through sequence-specific transcription factors. Here, we provide evidence that the maternally deposited pioneer transcription factor Foxh1 plays a critical role in directing PRC2 to specific genomic loci during zygotic genome activation in Xenopus . Foxh1 is a critical transcription factor mediating Nodal signaling, but it also plays an earlier role by pre-binding enhancers prior to signaling activation. This pre-binding is essential for forming enhanceosome complexes that trigger mesendodermal gene expression and drive gastrulation, in cooperation with other maternal transcription factors. Using maternal Foxh1-null embryos, we demonstrate that Foxh1 directly recruits Ezh2, the catalytic subunit of PRC2, to Foxh1-bound loci. Loss of Foxh1 impairs Ezh2 recruitment, leading to a global reduction in H3K27me3. These findings support a dual-function model in which Foxh1 not only activates endodermal gene expression in endoderm, but also recruits PRC2 to silence the same genes in ectoderm. This dual activity of Foxh1 allows the spatially coordinated epigenetic states of the endodermal gene regulatory program during early embryogenesis.

Highlights

  • Foxh1 recruits Ezh2 to deposit H3K27me3 at specific loci in early embryos

  • Maternal Foxh1 loss reduces H3K27me3 and disrupts lineage segregation

  • Foxh1 both activates and represses endoderm genes in a context-specific way

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