Publication | Open Access
The Polycomb-Dependent Epigenome Controls β Cell Dysfunction, Dedifferentiation, and Diabetes
141
Citations
40
References
2018
Year
Epigenetic ChangeEpigeneticsCellular PhysiologyDeep Epigenome MappingTranscriptional RegulationCell SignalingSystems BiologyType 2Diabetes ComplicationsGene ExpressionEpigenetic RegulationCell BiologyChromatin FunctionChromatinChromatin StructureChromatin RemodelingNatural SciencesDiabetesEpigenomicsDiabetes Mellitusβ Cell IdentityMedicineCell Development
To date, it remains largely unclear to what extent chromatin machinery contributes to the susceptibility and progression of complex diseases. Here, we combine deep epigenome mapping with single-cell transcriptomics to mine for evidence of chromatin dysregulation in type 2 diabetes. We find two chromatin-state signatures that track β cell dysfunction in mice and humans: ectopic activation of bivalent Polycomb-silenced domains and loss of expression at an epigenomically unique class of lineage-defining genes. β cell-specific Polycomb (Eed/PRC2) loss of function in mice triggers diabetes-mimicking transcriptional signatures and highly penetrant, hyperglycemia-independent dedifferentiation, indicating that PRC2 dysregulation contributes to disease. The work provides novel resources for exploring β cell transcriptional regulation and identifies PRC2 as necessary for long-term maintenance of β cell identity. Importantly, the data suggest a two-hit (chromatin and hyperglycemia) model for loss of β cell identity in diabetes.
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