Reprogramming of differentiated cells into pluripotent cells can occur in vivo, but the mechanisms involved remain to be elucidated. Senescence is a cellular response to damage, characterized by abundant production of cytokines and other secreted factors that, together with the recruitment of inflammatory cells, result in tissue remodeling. Here, we show that in vivo expression of the reprogramming factors OCT4, SOX2, KLF4, and cMYC (OSKM) in mice leads to senescence and reprogramming, both coexisting in close proximity. Genetic and pharmacological analyses indicate that OSKM-induced senescence requires the Ink4a/Arf locus and, through the production of the cytokine interleukin-6, creates a permissive tissue environment for in vivo reprogramming. Biological conditions linked to senescence, such as tissue injury or aging, favor in vivo reprogramming by OSKM. These observations may be relevant for tissue repair.
Post-translational epigenetic modifications take place in mouse neurons of the dentate gyrus (DG) with age. Here, we report that agedependent reduction in H3K9 trimethylation (H3K9me3) is prevented by cyclic induction of the Yamanaka factors used for cell reprogramming. Interestingly, Yamanaka factors elevated the levels of migrating cells containing the neurogenic markers doublecortin and calretinin, and the levels of the NMDA receptor subunit GluN2B. These changes could result in an increase in the survival of newborn DG neurons during their maturation and higher synaptic plasticity in mature neurons. Importantly, these cellular changes were accompanied by an improvement in mouse performance in the object recognition test over long time. We conclude that transient cyclic reprogramming in vivo in the central nervous system could be an effective strategy to ameliorate aging of the central nervous system and neurodegenerative diseases.
Pluripotent stem cells (PSCs) transition between cell states in vitro and reflect developmental changes in the early embryo. PSCs can be stabilized in the naïve state by blocking extracellular differentiation stimuli, particularly FGF-MEK signaling. Here, we report that multiple features of the naïve state in human and mouse PSCs can be recapitulated without affecting FGF-MEK-signaling or global DNA methylation. Mechanistically, chemical inhibition of CDK8 and CDK19 kinases removes their ability to repress the Mediator complex at enhancers. Thus CDK8/19 inhibition increases Mediator-driven recruitment of RNA Pol II to promoters and enhancers. This efficiently stabilizes the naïve transcriptional program and confers resistance to enhancer perturbation by BRD4 inhibition.Moreover, naïve pluripotency during embryonic development coincides with a reduction in CDK8/19. We conclude that global hyperactivation of enhancers drives naïve pluripotency, and this can be achieved in vitro by inhibiting CDK8/19 kinase activity. These principles may apply to other contexts of cellular plasticity. RESULTS Inhibition of Mediator kinase stabilizes mouse naïve pluripotencyGFP knock-in reporters at key stem cell marker genes such as Nanog represent well-established and precise indicators of the naïve (GFP high ) and primed states (GFP low ) 18,22,29 . For example, in 2i-naïve state, Nanog promoter activity is enhanced, yielding a characteristically homogenous Nanog-GFP high cell expression pattern and uniform dome-shaped colonies (Fig. 1A-C, and Extended Data Fig. 1A). In contrast, the Nanog promoter is metastable in primed state PSCs, reversibly oscillating between high and low activity, presenting a heterogeneous Nanog-GFP expression pattern and flattened diffuse colonies, indicative of a general underlying switch in transcriptional program 18,20,23,29,30 . The BRD4 inhibitor JQ1 destabilizes enhancers and resulted in colony flattening and GFP low status (Fig. 1A), as reported [26][27][28] . In this experimental setting, we tested the effect of manipulating the transcriptional cyclin-dependent kinases (CDK7, CDK8/19 and CDK9) with a panel of small molecule inhibitors. Several potent Lynch et al., submitted 19 19 and structurally-unrelated CDK8/19 inhibitors had a positive effect, inducing the formation of homogenous dome-shaped colonies, and upregulating both the Nanog-GFP reporter and endogenous Nanog expression, similar to PSC in the 2i-naïve state (Fig. 1A-E; Extended Data Fig. 1A; Supplementary Table 1), while inhibition of CDK7 or CDK9 did not. Potency and selectivity of CDK8/19inhibitors, commercially available or developed in-house, were assessed by multiple methods: (i) selectivity was suggested by a KinomeScan panel of 456 kinases; (ii) Lanthascreen assays demonstrated inhibitory activity at nanomolar concentrations against pure recombinant CDK8/CCNC and CDK19/CCNC; (iii) luciferase reporter cell assays (TOP-FLASH); and (iv) potent inhibition of STAT1-Ser727 phosphorylation in human PSCs, a well-documented CDK8 t...
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