Open Access
Open access
Cell Reports, volume 42, issue 6, pages 112547

Chemical-induced epigenome resetting for regeneration program activation in human cells

Guan Wang 1, 2
Yanglu Wang 1, 3
Yulin Lyu 4
Huanjing He 1
Shijia Liuyang 1
Jinlin Wang 1
Shicheng Sun 1
Zheng Zhang 1
Yao Fu 1
Jialiang Zhu 1
Xinxing Zhong 1, 2
Zhe Yang 1
Qijing Chen 1
L Cheng 4
Jingyang Guan 5
Hongkui Deng 1, 2
Show full list: 16 authors
Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2023-06-01
Journal: Cell Reports
scimago Q1
SJR4.279
CiteScore13.8
Impact factor7.5
ISSN22111247, 26391856
General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology
Abstract
Human somatic cells can be reprogrammed to pluripotent stem cells by small molecules through an intermediate stage with a regeneration signature, but how this regeneration state is induced remains largely unknown. Here, through integrated single-cell analysis of transcriptome, we demonstrate that the pathway of human chemical reprogramming with regeneration state is distinct from that of transcription-factor-mediated reprogramming. Time-course construction of chromatin landscapes unveils hierarchical histone modification remodeling underlying the regeneration program, which involved sequential enhancer recommissioning and mirrored the reversal process of regeneration potential lost in organisms as they mature. In addition, LEF1 is identified as a key upstream regulator for regeneration gene program activation. Furthermore, we reveal that regeneration program activation requires sequential enhancer silencing of somatic and proinflammatory programs. Altogether, chemical reprogramming resets the epigenome through reversal of the loss of natural regeneration, representing a distinct concept for cellular reprogramming and advancing the development of regenerative therapeutic strategies.
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