24 January 2025, 11:00
METABOLIC REWIRING UNDERPINS HUMAN TROPHOBLAST INDUCTION
24 January 20252025Hamburg SpeakerEMBL Rome
AbstractDevelopment is driven by a sequence of molecularly interconnected transcriptional epigenetic and metabolic changes Specific metabolites like ketoglutarate KG function as signalling molecules affecting the activity of chromatin modifying enzymes It remains unclear how such non canonical function of metabolism coordinates specific cell state changes especially in early... AbstractDevelopment is driven by a sequence of molecularly interconnected transcriptional, epigenetic, and metabolic changes. Specific metabolites, like α-ketoglutarate (αKG), function as signalling molecules affecting the activity of chromatin modifying enzymes. It remains unclear, how such non-canonical function of metabolism coordinates specific cell-state changes especially in early development. Here we uncover that when naive human embryonic stem cells (nESC) are induced towards human trophoblast stem cells (hiTSC) a significant metabolic rewiring occurs, characterised by the accumulation of αKG. Published in vivo transcriptomic data further confirmed that metabolic rewiring likely takes place in the nascent trophectoderm (TE). We show that the intracellular αKG level is an important regulator of TE fate acquisition. Indeed, a dimethyl-αKG (dm-αKG) treatment of nESC increases their...
Speaker(s): Jan Zylicz, University of Copenhagen, Denmark
Host: Jamie Hackett and Ana Boskovic
Place: Conf Room/Building 14
Hamburg Speaker
EMBL Rome
Additional information
Abstract
Development is driven by a sequence of molecularly interconnected transcriptional, epigenetic, and metabolic changes. Specific metabolites, like α-ketoglutarate (αKG), function as signalling molecules affecting the activity of chromatin modifying enzymes. It remains unclear, how such non-canonical function of metabolism coordinates specific cell-state changes especially in early development. Here we uncover that when naive human embryonic stem cells (nESC) are induced towards human trophoblast stem cells (hiTSC) a significant metabolic rewiring occurs, characterised by the accumulation of αKG. Published in vivo transcriptomic data further confirmed that metabolic rewiring likely takes place in the nascent trophectoderm (TE). We show that the intracellular αKG level is an important regulator of TE fate acquisition. Indeed, a dimethyl-αKG (dm-αKG) treatment of nESC increases their competence towards TE-like cells during hiTSC induction. Moreover, dm-αKG also increases the robustness of blastoid polarisation and TE maturation. Surprisingly, dm-αKG treatment does not affect global histone methylation levels in nESC, but rather leads to decreased acetyl-CoA levels, reduced histone acetyltransferase (HAT) activity and weakening of the pluripotency network. Further functional assays confirmed that both HAT inhibition and increased αKG level promote nESC competence towards TE but not other lineages e.g. primitive endoderm. We propose that an increased αKG level regulates pluripotency by reducing acetylation, thus creating a positive feedback loop promoting the induction of TE fate.