Active repression of muscle fate preserves neural lineage identity during cerebellum development
Discuss this preprint
Start a discussion What are Sciety discussions?Listed in
This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.Abstract
Cell fate commitment is commonly thought to entail progressive restriction of developmental potential, enforced by passive, heterochromatin-based silencing of alternative lineage programs. Here we show that maintenance of neural identity during cerebellum development instead requires active repression of a starkly divergent fate by the TEAD–INSM1 transcriptional complex. Loss of TEAD1/2 or INSM1 activates the myogenic master regulator Myod1 , resulting in neural cells acquiring transcriptional, structural, and metabolic features of skeletal muscle cells. Deletion of Myod1 fully suppresses neural-to-muscle conversion while partially rescuing neural developmental defects. Our results uncover a latent alternative lineage during neurodevelopment and a surprising role for sequence-specific transcription factors in enforcing lineage boundaries, including those previously thought essentially unbreachable, with implications for understanding aberrant differentiation in disease contexts and cell-type evolution.