This proposal will test the hypothesis that SOX transcription factors (TFs) modulate the genomic specificity of Wnt/Beta-catenin (BCAT) mediated transcription in early gut development and determine the underlying molecular mechanisms. Wnt signaling regulates gene expression in digestive system development, homeostasis and disease, where it is an important therapeutic target. While the core Wnt transcriptional machinery is well studied, how cell-specific target genes are selected remains one of the most important unresolved issues in the field. Current dogma is that canonical Wnt stabilizes cytoplasmic BCAT, which translocates to the nucleus and interacts with one of four TCF/LEF HMG-box TFs to stimulate transcription. However, all TCFs bind to nearly identical consensus sites indicating they alone cannot account for the diversity of transcriptional responses. Using the complementary advantages of Xenopus embryos and differentiating human pluripotent stem cells (hPSC), we have accumulated compelling evidence that SOX HMG-box TFs modulate the genomic specificity of Wnt/BCAT-mediated transcription during early gut development. Our preliminary ChIP-seq data and functional analyses suggests that different SOX TFs can recruit BCAT to distinct enhancers in a tissue specific manner. On some enhancers SOX and BCAT synergistically activate transcription independent of TCFs. Other enhancers appear to be co-occupied by SOX, BCAT and TCFs, suggesting tertiary complexes where SOX and TCF might cooperate or compete to bind DNA and BCAT to activate or represses transcription. These data suggest novel regulatory mechanisms and indicate that SOXs may be wide-spread unappreciated factors regulating Wnt responses. We propose to test this hypothesis with the following aims:
Aim 1 : Test the hypothesis that SOXs regulate the genomic recruitment of BCAT to lineage specific enhancers.
Aim 2 : Determine how Sox17 and Bcat coregulate Wnt-responsive enhancers to control spatially restricted transcription in the embryo.
Aim 3 : Determine the biochemical mechanisms by which SOX-BCAT-TCF complexes interact on DNA. These studies will reveal the SOX-BCAT regulated GRN of gut development and provide a new paradigm for how cell-specific Wnt-mediated transcription is regulated in development and disease.
Wnt growth factors controls many aspects of digestive system development, stem cell homeostasis and cancer, where it is an important therapeutic target. How Wnts control different genetic programs in different cells is an important unanswered question. We will test the novel idea that SOX proteins can influence which genes are activated in response to Wnt and elucidate the molecular mechanisms, which will have implications for controlling Wnt activity therapeutically.