Click here to close
Hello! We notice that you are using Internet Explorer, which is not supported by Xenbase and may cause the site to display incorrectly.
We suggest using a current version of Chrome,
FireFox, or Safari.
Dev Biol
2016 Jun 01;4141:34-44. doi: 10.1016/j.ydbio.2016.04.006.
Show Gene links
Show Anatomy links
FoxH1 mediates a Grg4 and Smad2 dependent transcriptional switch in Nodal signaling during Xenopus mesoderm development.
Reid CD
,
Steiner AB
,
Yaklichkin S
,
Lu Q
,
Wang S
,
Hennessy M
,
Kessler DS
.
???displayArticle.abstract???
In the vertebrate blastula and gastrula the Nodal pathway is essential for formation of the primary germ layers and the organizer. Nodal autoregulatory feedback potentiates signaling activity, but mechanisms limiting embryonic Nodal ligand transcription are poorly understood. Here we describe a transcriptional switch mechanism mediated by FoxH1, the principle effector of Nodal autoregulation. FoxH1 contains a conserved engrailed homology (EH1) motif that mediates direct binding of groucho-related gene 4 (Grg4), a Groucho family corepressor. Nodal-dependent gene expression is suppressed by FoxH1, but enhanced by a FoxH1 EH1 mutant, indicating that the EH1 motif is necessary for repression. Grg4 blocks Nodal-induced mesodermal gene expression and Nodal autoregulation, suggesting that Grg4 limits Nodal pathway activity. Conversely, blocking Grg4 function in the ectoderm results in ectopic expression of Nodal target genes. FoxH1 and Grg4 occupy the Xnr1 enhancer, and Grg4 occupancy is dependent on the FoxH1 EH1 motif. Grg4 occupancy at the Xnr1 enhancer significantly decreases with Nodal activation or Smad2 overexpression, while FoxH1 occupancy is unaffected. These results suggest that Nodal-activated Smad2 physically displaces Grg4 from FoxH1, an essential feature of the transcriptional switch mechanism. In support of this model, when FoxH1 is unable to bind Smad2, Grg4 occupancy is maintained at the Xnr1 enhancer, even in the presence of Nodal signaling. Our findings reveal that FoxH1 mediates both activation and repression of Nodal gene expression. We propose that this transcriptional switch is essential to delimit Nodal pathway activity in vertebrate germ layer formation.
Fig. 1. FoxH1 contains a conserved EH1 motif that mediates a physical interaction with Grg4. (A) A diagram of the FoxH1 protein shows the location of the EH1 motif between the winged helix (WH) DNA binding domain and the Smad Interaction Domain (SID). This motif is highly conserved among multiple species (Xenopus, zebrafish, mouse and human). In the FoxH1A6 mutant, 6 of the 7 residues that comprise the EH1 motif have been mutated to alanine. (B) FoxH1 physically interacts with Grg4. mRNA encoding GST, GST-FoxH1 or GST-FoxH1A6 (1 ng) was injected along with myc-Grg4 mRNA (5 ng) into single cell embryos, which were collected at the gastrula stage for GST pulldown assays (Left). Top panel represents an anti-myc western blot, showing the physical interaction of myc-Grg4 with GST-FoxH1 (lane 3), which is reduced with mutation of the EH1 motif in FoxH1A6 (lane 4). Lower panel is an anti-GST western indicating recovery of GST proteins by pulldown. (Right) Control western blots showing approximately equal expression of myc-tagged and GST-tagged proteins in the starting lysates.
Fig. 2. FoxH1 represses Nodal target genes at blastula and gastrula stages. (A) FoxH1, but not FoxH1A6, represses expression of endogenous mesodermal and Nodal genes. Embryos were injected in the vegetal pole with mRNA encoding myc-FoxH1 or myc-FoxH1A6 (250 pg). cDNA was prepared from pooled whole embryos collected at blastula stage (for Xnr5 and Xnr6) and gastrula stage (for Xbra, Chd and Gsc). qPCR was performed for the mesodermal marker Brachyury, the organizer genes Chordin and Goosecoid, and the Nodal ligands Xnr1, Xnr5 and Xnr6. The data presented are the combined results of three independent biological replicates, and have been normalized to expression of a housekeeping gene, EF1α. Error bars represent standard error. * indicates p<0.05 by Student's t-test. (B) FoxH1, but not FoxH1A6, inhibits expression of Xnr5 and Xnr6 in the blastula vegetal pole. Embryos injected in the vegetal pole with mRNA encoding myc-FoxH1 or myc-FoxH1A6 (250 pg) were collected at the late blastula stage and subjected to in situ hybridization for either Xnr5 or Xnr6. (C) FoxH1, but not FoxH1A6, blocks expression of Xbra and Chd in the gastrula. Embryos were injected in the vegetal pole with mRNA encoding myc-FoxH1 or myc-FoxH1A6 (250 pg) and collected at the mid-gastrula stage. In situ hybridization was performed to analyze expression of Xbra and Chd. 100 embryos were analyzed for each condition, and the percentage of embryos displaying normal (dark gray bar) or reduced (light gray bar) expression was quantified in the bar graphs to the right. Expression of FoxH1 reduced the expression of Xnr5, Xnr6, Xbra and Chd.
Fig. 3. Grg4 inhibits Nodal-dependent mesoderm induction. (A) mRNA encoding Xnr1 (30 pg) or mRNA encoding myc-Grg4 (5 ng), or a combination of the two, were injected into the animal pole of one-cell stage embryos. Animal caps were prepared at blastula stage and analyzed for the expression of mesodermal and Nodal gene expression by RT-PCR at gastrula stage. Xnr1 induced expression of Xbra, Xwnt8 and the organizer gene Gsc, as well as Xnr1, Xnr2, Xnr4 and Der. Coexpression of myc-Grg4 blocked the upregulation of all these genes. Ef1α served as a control for RNA recovery and loading controls. Uninjected animal caps and PCR from a cDNA sample made without reverse transcriptase (Embryo-RT) showed no amplification. Whole embryo cDNA was used as a positive control. (B) Grg5 expression is sufficient to induce mesoderm in animal pole explants. mRNA encoding myc-Grg4 or myc-Grg5 (5 ng) was injected into the animal pole at the one-cell stage, and explants were isolated as described. Grg5 induced the mesodermal genes, as well as Xnr1 and Der. (C) Grg5 expression is sufficient to induce convergent extension. mRNA encoding myc-Grg4 or myc-Grg5 (5 ng) was injected into the animal pole of one-cell stage embryos. Explants were isolated at the blastula stage and allowed to develop until the neurula stage. Pictured is an unmanipulated embryo, which serves as a control for staging, and representative control, myc-Grg4, and myc-Grg5 injected explants. (D) Grg4 and Grg5 modulate the expression of a FoxH1-dependent reporter. The 3xARE luciferase reporter plasmid (100 pg) was injected along with a Renilla luciferase control plasmid (10 pg) at the one-cell stage, followed by single-blastomere injection at the two cell stage with mRNA encoding myc-FoxH1 or myc-FoxH1A6 (250 pg) alone, or in combination with myc-Grg4 or myc-Grg5 mRNA (5 ng). The 3xARE reporter alone served as a control for basal activity. Data shown represents four independent experiments and error bars represent standard error. * indicates p<0.05 as compared to FoxH1 alone. (E) HDAC inhibition induces Nodal and mesodermal gene expression in ectoderm. Animal explants prepared from blastula embryos were cultured for 2 h in media containing 2 mM sodium butyrate (Na Butyrate – gray bars) or 2 mM valproic acid (black bars). cDNA was prepared from treated and untreated caps and qPCR was performed to assay expression of the Xnr1, Xnr5, Xnr6, Xbra, and Chd. Gene expression is normalized to Ef1α and is shown as fold increase in expression over untreated caps. Error bars represent standard error in four independent experiments.
Fig. 4. Grg4 occupies the endogenous Xnr1 Enhancer through interaction with the FoxH1 EH1 motif. Occupancy at the Xnr1 enhancer was evaluated by chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) and quantitative PCR (qPCR) of embryos injected with (A) 250 pg myc-FoxH1 or (B) 8 ng myc-Grg4. Immunoprecipitation using anti-myc antibody was also performed on uninjected embryos (Control). Each result shown represents three independent experiments. The white bars represent qPCR for genomic Xnr1 3′UTR as a control. (C) Genomic DNA fragments recovered by ChIP from embryos injected with myc-Grg4 alone (8 ng) or in combination with untagged FoxH1 or FoxH1A6 (250 pg) were evaluated by qPCR for the Xnr1 Intron 1 enhancer (gray bars). The white bars represent qPCR for genomic Ef1α as a control. The data shown represent three independent biological replicates. * indicates that p<0.05 as compared to myc-Grg4 alone.
Fig. 5. Grg4 occupies the Xnr1 enhancer in a Nodal-responsive manner. (A) ChIP for myc-FoxH1 alone or coexpressed with Xnr1 (myc-FoxH1+Xnr1) or (B) ChIP for myc-Grg4 alone or coexpressed with Xnr1 (myc-Grg4+Xnr1) was evaluated by qPCR for enrichment of the Xnr1 enhancer. (C) ChIP for endogenous Smad2/3 in uninjected embryos or embryos expressing 50 pg Xnr1 mRNA (+Xnr1) was evaluated by qPCR for the Xnr1 enhancer. Rabbit IGG ChIP serves as a negative control (IGG). (D) ChIP for myc-Grg4 alone, or coexpressed with Xnr1 (myc-Grg4+Xnr1) or Smad2GFP mRNA (myc-Grg4+Smad2GFP) was evaluated by qPCR for the Xnr1 enhancer. (E) ChIP for myc-Grg4 expressed alone or in combination with the following: FoxH1 (myc-Grg4+FoxH1), FoxH1 and Xnr1 (myc-Grg4+FoxH1+Xnr1), FoxH1∆SID (myc-Grg4+FoxH1∆SID) or FoxH1∆SID and Xnr1 (myc-Grg4+FoxH1∆SID+Xnr1) were evaluated by qPCR for the Xnr1 enhancer. The data shown represent three independent biological replicates. Immunoprecipitation using anti-myc antibody was performed on uninjected embryos (Control). White bars represent qPCR for genomic Xmlc2 or genomic Xnr1 3′UTR as additional negative controls. * indicates p<0.05.
supp Fig. 1: Expression levels of tagged FoxH1 proteins. (A) Immunocytochemistry for myc-tagged FoxH1 proteins demonstrates equivalent expression and nuclear localization of wild-type and mutant proteins in Xenopus embryos (250 pg mRNA injection for each construct). (B) Western blot showing near equal expression of myc-FoxH1 and myc-FoxH1A6 protein expression in embryos injected with 250 pg mRNA. The equivalent of 0.5 embryo is loaded in each lane. MAPK expression serves as loading control. (C) Western blots for myc-FoxH1 or myc-Grg4 after chromatin immunoprecipitation from embryos. A 20 µl sample of the eluate from ChIP of myc-FoxH1 or myc-Grg4 was combined with Laemmli buffer and boiled 30 min at 95 °C. The resulting sample was subjected to Western blot analysis using 9E10 antibody. The Western approximates 10% of the total immunoprecipitate.
Suppl Fig. 2: Grg4 specifically blocks Nodal-dependent mesoderm induction. (A) One-cell stage embryos were injected in the animal pole with mRNAs encoding Xnr1 (30 pg), eFGF (400 pg), myc-Grg4 (5 ng) or the combinations indicated. RT-PCR was performed on animal explants prepared at blastula stage and collected at gastrula stage. Expression of mesodermal genes Xbra and Xwnt8 is shown, with Ef1α as a positive control.
Suppl. Fig. 3: FoxH1, Grg4 and Grg5 modulate the activity of the Xnr1 intron 1 enhancer reporter. The Xnr1 enhancer luciferase reporter plasmid (100 pg) was injected along with a Renilla luciferase control plasmid (10 pg) at the one-cell stage, followed by single-blastomere injection at the two cell stage with mRNA encoding myc-FoxH1 or myc-FoxH1A6 (250 pg) alone, or in combination with myc-Grg4 or myc-Grg5 mRNA (5 ng). The Xnr1 enhancer reporter alone served as a control for basal activity. Data shown represent seven independent experiments and error bars represent standard error. * indicates p<0.05.
suppl Fig. 4: Smad2/3 occupies the endogenous Xnr1 enhancer in a FoxH1-dependent manner. (A) ChIP for endogenous Smad2/3 in uninjected embryos demonstrates Xnr1 enhancer enrichment (gray bars) without enrichment for the Xmlc2 enhancer (white bars). (B) ChIP for endogenous Smad2/3 in uninjected embryos or embryos injected with mRNA encoding FoxH1 or FoxH1∆SID mRNA (250 pg) was evaluated by qPCR for the Xnr1 enhancer. The white bars represent qPCR for the Xnr1 3′UTR control, which exhibits no interaction. The data presented represent three independent experiments. (C) ChIP for myc-p300 either alone or coexpressed with Xnr1 was evaluated by qPCR for the Xnr1 enhancer. The white bars represent qPCR for genomic Xmlc2 as a control. * indicates p<0.05 when compared to myc-p300 alone. The data represent four independent experiments.
Agius,
Endodermal Nodal-related signals and mesoderm induction in Xenopus.
2000, Pubmed,
Xenbase
Agius,
Endodermal Nodal-related signals and mesoderm induction in Xenopus.
2000,
Pubmed
,
Xenbase
Bae,
Siamois and Twin are redundant and essential in formation of the Spemann organizer.
2011,
Pubmed
,
Xenbase
Barolo,
Three habits of highly effective signaling pathways: principles of transcriptional control by developmental cell signaling.
2002,
Pubmed
Beagle,
AES/GRG5: more than just a dominant-negative TLE/GRG family member.
2010,
Pubmed
Bell,
Cell fate specification and competence by Coco, a maternal BMP, TGFbeta and Wnt inhibitor.
2003,
Pubmed
,
Xenbase
Blythe,
Chromatin immunoprecipitation in early Xenopus laevis embryos.
2009,
Pubmed
,
Xenbase
Brantjes,
All Tcf HMG box transcription factors interact with Groucho-related co-repressors.
2001,
Pubmed
Chang,
Regulation of nodal and BMP signaling by tomoregulin-1 (X7365) through novel mechanisms.
2003,
Pubmed
,
Xenbase
Chen,
A transcriptional partner for MAD proteins in TGF-beta signalling.
1996,
Pubmed
,
Xenbase
Chiu,
Genome-wide view of TGFβ/Foxh1 regulation of the early mesendoderm program.
2014,
Pubmed
,
Xenbase
Chodaparambil,
Molecular functions of the TLE tetramerization domain in Wnt target gene repression.
2014,
Pubmed
Choudhury,
Cloning and developmental expression of Xenopus cDNAs encoding the Enhancer of split groucho and related proteins.
1997,
Pubmed
,
Xenbase
Conlon,
A novel retrovirally induced embryonic lethal mutation in the mouse: assessment of the developmental fate of embryonic stem cells homozygous for the 413.d proviral integration.
1991,
Pubmed
Conlon,
A primary requirement for nodal in the formation and maintenance of the primitive streak in the mouse.
1994,
Pubmed
Daniels,
Negative regulation of Smad2 by PIASy is required for proper Xenopus mesoderm formation.
2004,
Pubmed
,
Xenbase
Dougan,
The role of the zebrafish nodal-related genes squint and cyclops in patterning of mesendoderm.
2003,
Pubmed
Dupont,
Germ-layer specification and control of cell growth by Ectodermin, a Smad4 ubiquitin ligase.
2005,
Pubmed
,
Xenbase
Faure,
Endogenous patterns of TGFbeta superfamily signaling during early Xenopus development.
2000,
Pubmed
,
Xenbase
Germain,
Homeodomain and winged-helix transcription factors recruit activated Smads to distinct promoter elements via a common Smad interaction motif.
2000,
Pubmed
,
Xenbase
Gritsman,
The EGF-CFC protein one-eyed pinhead is essential for nodal signaling.
1999,
Pubmed
,
Xenbase
Gritsman,
Nodal signaling patterns the organizer.
2000,
Pubmed
,
Xenbase
Halstead,
Disrupting Foxh1-Groucho interaction reveals robustness of nodal-based embryonic patterning.
2015,
Pubmed
Hilton,
VegT activation of the early zygotic gene Xnr5 requires lifting of Tcf-mediated repression in the Xenopus blastula.
2003,
Pubmed
,
Xenbase
Hoodless,
Dominant-negative Smad2 mutants inhibit activin/Vg1 signaling and disrupt axis formation in Xenopus.
1999,
Pubmed
,
Xenbase
Hoodless,
FoxH1 (Fast) functions to specify the anterior primitive streak in the mouse.
2001,
Pubmed
Houston,
Repression of organizer genes in dorsal and ventral Xenopus cells mediated by maternal XTcf3.
2002,
Pubmed
,
Xenbase
Hyde,
Regulation of the early expression of the Xenopus nodal-related 1 gene, Xnr1.
2000,
Pubmed
,
Xenbase
Inoue,
Smad3 is acetylated by p300/CBP to regulate its transactivation activity.
2007,
Pubmed
Inui,
Self-regulation of the head-inducing properties of the Spemann organizer.
2012,
Pubmed
,
Xenbase
Iratni,
Inhibition of excess nodal signaling during mouse gastrulation by the transcriptional corepressor DRAP1.
2002,
Pubmed
Jones,
Nodal-related signals induce axial mesoderm and dorsalize mesoderm during gastrulation.
1995,
Pubmed
,
Xenbase
Joseph,
Xnr4: a Xenopus nodal-related gene expressed in the Spemann organizer.
1997,
Pubmed
,
Xenbase
Kimelman,
Mesoderm induction: from caps to chips.
2006,
Pubmed
,
Xenbase
Kofron,
Mesoderm induction in Xenopus is a zygotic event regulated by maternal VegT via TGFbeta growth factors.
1999,
Pubmed
,
Xenbase
Kofron,
New roles for FoxH1 in patterning the early embryo.
2004,
Pubmed
,
Xenbase
Larabell,
Confocal microscopy analysis of living Xenopus eggs and the mechanism of cortical rotation.
1996,
Pubmed
,
Xenbase
Molenaar,
Differential expression of the Groucho-related genes 4 and 5 during early development of Xenopus laevis.
2000,
Pubmed
,
Xenbase
Nagaso,
Dual specificity of activin type II receptor ActRIIb in dorso-ventral patterning during zebrafish embryogenesis.
1999,
Pubmed
New,
Differential effects on Xenopus development of interference with type IIA and type IIB activin receptors.
1997,
Pubmed
,
Xenbase
Osada,
Activin/nodal responsiveness and asymmetric expression of a Xenopus nodal-related gene converge on a FAST-regulated module in intron 1.
2000,
Pubmed
,
Xenbase
Patel,
Epigenetic mechanisms of Groucho/Grg/TLE mediated transcriptional repression.
2012,
Pubmed
Pei,
An early requirement for maternal FoxH1 during zebrafish gastrulation.
2007,
Pubmed
Pineda-Salgado,
Expression of Panza, an alpha2-macroglobulin, in a restricted dorsal domain of the primitive gut in Xenopus laevis.
2005,
Pubmed
,
Xenbase
Pogoda,
The zebrafish forkhead transcription factor FoxH1/Fast1 is a modulator of nodal signaling required for organizer formation.
2000,
Pubmed
Reid,
Transcriptional integration of Wnt and Nodal pathways in establishment of the Spemann organizer.
2012,
Pubmed
,
Xenbase
Roose,
The Xenopus Wnt effector XTcf-3 interacts with Groucho-related transcriptional repressors.
1998,
Pubmed
,
Xenbase
Ross,
Smads orchestrate specific histone modifications and chromatin remodeling to activate transcription.
2006,
Pubmed
Sachdev,
PIASy, a nuclear matrix-associated SUMO E3 ligase, represses LEF1 activity by sequestration into nuclear bodies.
2001,
Pubmed
Sampath,
Functional differences among Xenopus nodal-related genes in left-right axis determination.
1997,
Pubmed
,
Xenbase
Sasai,
Xenopus chordin: a novel dorsalizing factor activated by organizer-specific homeobox genes.
1994,
Pubmed
,
Xenbase
Schier,
Nodal morphogens.
2009,
Pubmed
Shen,
Nodal signaling: developmental roles and regulation.
2007,
Pubmed
Slagle,
Nodal-dependent mesendoderm specification requires the combinatorial activities of FoxH1 and Eomesodermin.
2011,
Pubmed
Sun,
derrière: a TGF-beta family member required for posterior development in Xenopus.
1999,
Pubmed
,
Xenbase
Suri,
Xema, a foxi-class gene expressed in the gastrula stage Xenopus ectoderm, is required for the suppression of mesendoderm.
2005,
Pubmed
,
Xenbase
Takahashi,
Two novel nodal-related genes initiate early inductive events in Xenopus Nieuwkoop center.
2000,
Pubmed
,
Xenbase
Tu,
Acetylation of Smad2 by the co-activator p300 regulates activin and transforming growth factor beta response.
2007,
Pubmed
Turki-Judeh,
Groucho: a corepressor with instructive roles in development.
2012,
Pubmed
Vize,
DNA sequences mediating the transcriptional response of the Mix.2 homeobox gene to mesoderm induction.
1996,
Pubmed
,
Xenbase
Watanabe,
FAST-1 is a key maternal effector of mesoderm inducers in the early Xenopus embryo.
1999,
Pubmed
,
Xenbase
Wilson,
Mesodermal patterning by an inducer gradient depends on secondary cell-cell communication.
1994,
Pubmed
,
Xenbase
Yaklichkin,
FoxD3 and Grg4 physically interact to repress transcription and induce mesoderm in Xenopus.
2007,
Pubmed
,
Xenbase
Yaklichkin,
Prevalence of the EH1 Groucho interaction motif in the metazoan Fox family of transcriptional regulators.
2007,
Pubmed
Yamamoto,
The transcription factor FoxH1 (FAST) mediates Nodal signaling during anterior-posterior patterning and node formation in the mouse.
2001,
Pubmed
Yang,
Beta-catenin/Tcf-regulated transcription prior to the midblastula transition.
2002,
Pubmed
,
Xenbase
Yao,
Goosecoid promotes head organizer activity by direct repression of Xwnt8 in Spemann's organizer.
2001,
Pubmed
,
Xenbase
Zhang,
Zebrafish Dpr2 inhibits mesoderm induction by promoting degradation of nodal receptors.
2004,
Pubmed