Final Report Summary - FAME (FUNCTIONS OF CHROMATIN MARKS IN REGULATION OF GENE EXPRESSION)
We investigate the biological significance of histone modifications covering enhancer and promoter sequences in the developing mouse small intestine as well as in the adult gut. The small intestine epithelium homeostasis requires rapid and continuous regeneration and differentiation of specific cell types from intestinal stem cells. The adult intestinal stem cells give rise to the first few generations of stem cell daughters, transit-amplifying cells, which in turn, undergoing a limited number of cell divisions, provide a vast progeny of terminally differentiated cell types: absorptive enterocytes and secretory Paneth, goblet, entero-endocrine and tuft cells. We have generated genome-wide transcriptome and chromatin state maps from the embryonic intestinal epithelium, adult intestinal stem cells, enterocytes and Paneth cells. We have uncovered the significance of chromatin modifications during (1) formation of the adult intestinal stem cell from their embryonic progenitors, (2) their maintenance and (3) as the adult intestinal stem cells differentiate along either absorptive or secretory lineages. We have defined sets of genes that are co-regulated by a combination of certain histone modifications at each stage of the intestinal stem cells lifespan. We have identified a large number of potential regulatory elements, including distal, proximal as well as intergenic enhancers. Some of these regulatory elements are common for all cells of the endodermal lineage whereas the others are specific for each cell type within the small intestinal epithelium. Our findings elucidated how the adult intestinal stem cells sustain their stemness. The results of this study increased our understanding of epigenetic mechanisms that control intestinal homeostasis. Furthermore, they provide important knowledge for development of potential therapeutic interventions for treatment of cancer, inflammatory and metabolic disorders.