Control of ground-state pluripotency by allelic regulation of Nanog

Nature advance online publication 12 February 2012. doi:10.1038/nature10807

Authors: Yusuke Miyanari & Maria-Elena Torres-Padilla

Pluripotency is established through genome-wide reprogramming during mammalian 
pre-implantation development, resulting in the formation of the naive epiblast. 
Reprogramming involves both the resetting of epigenetic marks and the 
activation of pluripotent-cell-specific genes such as Nanog and Oct4 (also 
known as Pou5f1). The tight regulation of these genes is crucial for 
reprogramming, but the mechanisms that regulate their expression in vivo have 
not been uncovered. Here we show that Nanog—but not Oct4—is monoallelically 
expressed in early pre-implantation embryos. Nanog then undergoes a progressive 
switch to biallelic expression during the transition towards ground-state 
pluripotency in the naive epiblast of the late blastocyst. Embryonic stem (ES) 
cells grown in leukaemia inhibitory factor (LIF) and serum express Nanog mainly 
monoallelically and show asynchronous replication of the Nanog locus, a feature 
of monoallelically expressed genes, but ES cells activate both alleles when 
cultured under 2i conditions, which mimic the pluripotent ground state in 
vitro. Live-cell imaging with reporter ES cells confirmed the allelic 
expression of Nanog and revealed allelic switching. The allelic expression of 
Nanog is regulated through the fibroblast growth factor–extracellular 
signal-regulated kinase signalling pathway, and it is accompanied by chromatin 
changes at the proximal promoter but occurs independently of DNA methylation. 
Nanog-heterozygous blastocysts have fewer inner-cell-mass derivatives and 
delayed primitive endoderm formation, indicating a role for the biallelic 
expression of Nanog in the timely maturation of the inner cell mass into a 
fully reprogrammed pluripotent epiblast. We suggest that the tight regulation 
of Nanog dose at the chromosome level is necessary for the acquisition of 
ground-state pluripotency during development. Our data highlight an unexpected 
role for allelic expression in controlling the dose of pluripotency factors in 
vivo, adding an extra level to the regulation of reprogramming.

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