Elsevier

Developmental Biology

Volume 434, Issue 1, 1 February 2018, Pages 108-120
Developmental Biology

Genome-wide transcriptomics analysis identifies sox7 and sox18 as specifically regulated by gata4 in cardiomyogenesis

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ydbio.2017.11.017Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • Gata 4, 5 and 6 have redundant and non-redundant functions in heart development.

  • RNA-seq analysis of Gata4, 5 and 6 knockdown experiments was carried out.

  • Genes specifically regulated by Gata4, 5 and 6 were identified.

  • The SoxF genes sox7 and sox18 were identified as specifically regulated by Gata4.

  • Epistasis demonstrates a regulatory axis from Gata4 to Sox7/18 to cardiomyogenesis.

Abstract

The transcription factors GATA4, GATA5 and GATA6 are important regulators of heart muscle differentiation (cardiomyogenesis), which function in a partially redundant manner. We identified genes specifically regulated by individual cardiogenic GATA factors in a genome-wide transcriptomics analysis. The genes regulated by gata4 are particularly interesting because GATA4 is able to induce differentiation of beating cardiomyocytes in Xenopus and in mammalian systems. Among the specifically gata4-regulated transcripts we identified two SoxF family members, sox7 and sox18. Experimental reinstatement of gata4 restores sox7 and sox18 expression, and loss of cardiomyocyte differentiation due to gata4 knockdown is partially restored by reinstating sox7 or sox18 expression, while (as previously reported) knockdown of sox7 or sox18 interferes with heart muscle formation. In order to test for conservation in mammalian cardiomyogenesis, we confirmed in mouse embryonic stem cells (ESCs) undergoing cardiomyogenesis that knockdown of Gata4 leads to reduced Sox7 (and Sox18) expression and that Gata4 is also uniquely capable of promptly inducing Sox7 expression. Taken together, we identify an important and conserved gene regulatory axis from gata4 to the SoxF paralogs sox7 and sox18 and further to heart muscle cell differentiation.

Keywords

GATA factors
Sox factors
Heart muscle
Cardiomyogenesis
Embryonic stem cells
Xenopus

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