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A neuronal enhancer network upstream of MEF2C is compromised in patients with Rett-like characteristics

Book Contribution - Book Abstract Conference Contribution

Myocyte enhancer factor 2C (MEF2C) is a core transcription factor in neurodevelopment and aberrations are typically associated with a Rett-like syndrome, featured by severe intellectual disability, seizures and stereotypic movements. However, structural variants upstream of MEF2C have been found in patients with a similar phenotype, suggesting that disruption of MEF2C regulatory elements represents the underlying genetic cause in these cases. To shed light on how these aberrations impact MEF2C regulation, we dissected the MEF2C regulatory landscape. Using Circularized Chromosome Conformation Capture (4C) sequencing in a neuronal cell line, we revealed a complex interaction network in which the MEF2C promoter physically contacts several distal enhancers located upstream of the coding sequence. Luciferase reporter assays confirmed enhancer activity for thirteen out of sixteen selected candidate enhancers. Moreover, using enhancer assays in zebrafish, we characterized eight enhancers with in vivo neuronal activity. While each of these enhancers displayed a distinct activity pattern, several showed overlapping activity in the forebrain, notochord or neurons above the eye. In summary, we disentangled a complex regulatory network governing neuronal MEF2C transcription that involves multiple distal enhancers. Disrupting this regulatory structure is likely detrimental to normal neurodevelopment and can give rise to neurodevelopmental disorders such as Rett-like syndrome.
Book: Epigenetics in the Nervous System : Development and Disease, Conference abstracts
Number of pages: 1
Publication year:2018