EOMES establishes mesoderm and endoderm differentiation potential through SWI/SNF-mediated global enhancer remodeling
Chiara M. Schröder et al.
Highlights
Enhancer chromatin is dynamically remodeled during mesoderm/endoderm (ME) differentiation
Global ME enhancer accessibility during pluripotency exit relies on the Tbx factor EOMES
EOMES and SWI/SNF cooperate to instruct chromatin accessibility at ME gene enhancers
ME enhancer accessibility enables competence for WNT and NODAL-induced ME gene expression
Summary
Mammalian pluripotent cells first segregate into neuroectoderm (NE), or mesoderm and endoderm (ME), characterized by lineage-specific transcriptional programs and chromatin states. To date, the relationship between transcription factor activities and dynamic chromatin changes that guide cell specification remains ill-defined. In this study, we employ mouse embryonic stem cell differentiation toward ME lineages to reveal crucial roles of the Tbx factorEomesto globally establish ME enhancer accessibility as the prerequisite for ME lineage competence and ME-specific gene expression. EOMES cooperates with the SWItch/sucrose non-fermentable (SWI/SNF) complex to drive chromatin rewiring that is essential to overcome default NE differentiation, which is favored by asymmetries in chromatin accessibility at pluripotent state. Following global ME enhancer remodeling, ME-specific gene transcription is controlled by additional signals such as Wnt and transforming growth factor β (TGF-β)/NODAL, as a second layer of gene expression regulation, which can be mechanistically separated from initial chromatin remodeling activities.