Publication | Open Access
Inhibition of histone deacetylase activity induces developmental plasticity in oligodendrocyte precursor cells
131
Citations
28
References
2007
Year
Histone ModificationsEpigenetic ChangeCell SpecializationEpigeneticsSocial SciencesHdac InhibitionLineage RestrictionNeurogenesisStem CellsSystems BiologyMolecular NeuroscienceCell BiologyChromatinLineage PlasticityDevelopmental BiologyDevelopmental PlasticityChromatin RemodelingEpigenomicsOligodendrocyte Precursor CellsMedicineNeural Stem CellEmbryonic Stem Cell
Recently, it was demonstrated that lineage-committed oligodendrocyte precursor cells (OPCs) can be converted to multipotent neural stem-like cells, capable of generating both neurons and glia after exposure to bone morphogenetic proteins. In an effort to understand and control the developmental plasticity of OPCs, we developed a high-throughput screen to identify novel chemical inducers of OPC reprogramming. Using this system, we discovered that inhibition of histone deacetylase (HDAC) activity in OPCs acts as a priming event in the induction of developmental plasticity, thereby expanding the differentiation potential to include the neuronal lineage. This conversion was found to be mediated, in part, through reactivation of sox2 and was highly reproducible at the clonal level. Further, genome-wide expression analysis demonstrated that HDAC inhibitor treatment activated sox2 and 12 other genes that identify or maintain the neural stem cell state while simultaneously silencing a large group of oligodendrocyte lineage-specific genes. This series of experiments demonstrates that global histone acetylation, induced by HDAC inhibition, can partially reverse the lineage restriction of OPCs, thereby inducing developmental plasticity.
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