Project description:The importance of unanchored Ub in innate immunity has been shown only for a limited number of unanchored Ub-interactors. We investigated what additional cellular factors interact with unanchored Ub and whether unanchored Ub plays a broader role in innate immunity. To identify unanchored Ub-interacting factors from murine lungs, we used His-tagged recombinant poly-Ub chains as bait. These chains were mixed with lung tissue lysates and protein complexes were isolated with Ni-NTA beads. Sample elutions were subjected to mass spectrometry (LC-MSMS) analysis.
Project description:Octamer-binding Pit-Oct-Unc (POU) family members have distinct reprogramming competences. OCT4 induces pluripotency, whereas POU III factors (OCT6, OCT7, OCT8, and OCT9) lack this ability, but are prone to inducing neural identities. However, which specific features of these proteins render the distinct reprograming competences remains unknown. Here, we present that OCT6 can also induce pluripotency. But, it works only with human cells, indicating its species-dependent reprogramming activity. Functional readouts with a series of reciprocal mutants uncover that the central role of OCT4 and its strong reprogramming competence to pluripotency arise from its C-terminal transactivation domain. Furthermore, we identify intrinsic properties of OCT7, OCT8, and OCT9 that are detrimental for inducing pluripotency. A chemical screen reveals that their persistent deficiency for inducing pluripotency can be surmounted by reducing H3K79 methylation in donor cells. Our findings delineate that intrinsic properties of POU factors and their responsive donor-cell epigenome state are tightly linked to the reprogramming competence.
Project description:The role of mitochondria dynamics and its molecular regulators remains largely unknown during naïve-to-primed pluripotent cell interconversion. Here we report that mitochondrial MTCH2 is a regulator of mitochondrial fusion, essential for the naïve-to-primed interconversion of murine embryonic stem cells (ESCs). During this interconversion, wild-type ESCs elongate their mitochondria and slightly alter their glutamine utilization. In contrast, MTCH2-/- ESCs fail to elongate their mitochondria and to alter their metabolism, maintaining high levels of histone acetylation and expression of naïve pluripotency markers. Importantly, enforced mitochondria elongation by the pro-fusion protein Mitofusin (MFN) 2 or by a dominant negative form of the pro-fission protein dynamin-related protein (DRP) 1 is sufficient to drive the exit from naïve pluripotency of both MTCH2-/- and wild-type ESCs. Taken together, our data indicate that mitochondria elongation, governed by MTCH2, plays a critical role and constitutes an early driving force in the naïve-to-primed pluripotency interconversion of murine ESCs.