Multicellular development requires extensive cell-cell interactions and transcriptional reprogramming accomplished at the level of chromatin remodeling. These processes are classically understood to entail the transmission of information from outside a cell to its nucleus, however this paradigm largely overlooks the fact that biology involves the movement of biochemical information across spaces beyond the plasma membrane and the nuclear envelope. Unlike prokaryotes, in which transcription and metabolism occur in the same membrane- bound compartment, multicellular eukaryotes partition their metabolism and biochemistry at multiple layers: amongst the organelles within a cell, between cells within a tissue, and throughout the organ systems that compose a host. We hypothesize that the spatial partitioning of biochemistry, through cellular metabolism, regulates cell development and function by controlling histone epigenetics and coordinating interacting cells within tissues. We have recently shown that metabolic crosstalk between the mitochondria and cytosol is an essential component of cell differentiation and set out to extend this paradigm to explore how the movement of metabolites across between cellular and tissue compartments dictates their biology. We seek to explore this at two levels: 1) elucidating the molecular mechanism explaining how mitochondrial-cytosolic crosstalk controls histone epigenetics; 2) investigating how cell-cell metabolite exchange influences development and coordinates responses between interacting populations of cells. We will explore these concepts in the context of the hematopoietic system, as its development requires extensive epigenetic remodeling, with each lineage and functional program now understood to be supported by a unique metabolic signature, making it an ideal model system for us to pursue these studies. This will be accomplished by taking advantage a CRISPR screening system we have developed that is compatible with nearly every population of primary hematopoietic cells. We will conduct both in vitro and in vivo unpooled and pooled, barcoded CRISPR screens evaluating all 77 genes encoding mitochondrial transporters as well as all plasma membrane transporters, to investigate how these metabolic transport systems impact epigenetic remodeling and development. These studies will be furthered by tandem sgRNA studies that will allow us to test the epigenetic remodeling enzymes downstream of the metabolic processes we are studying as well as a combinatorial reverse genetic approach in which different genes in the same network will be targeted in different populations of interacting cells, allowing us to map metabolic flow in trans. Altogether these studies will not only help establish a novel paradigm with which to approach molecular biology, but also provide fundamental mechanistic insights into gene regulation and development.

Public Health Relevance

We classically understand changes in the biology of cells and tissues as determined by how cells relay information from outside to their nucleus, in order to turn genes off and on. While this framework has helped explain the majority of biological research to date, it largely overlooks the fact that cell biology also requires the movement of a vast number of metabolites throughout the compartments inside a cell and between cells in a tissue. This proposal seeks to investigate how the movement of metabolic information within a cell and amongst populations of interacting cells controls how genes are turned off and on and how cells behave collectively inside an animal.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of General Medical Sciences (NIGMS)
Type
Unknown (R35)
Project #
1R35GM138085-01
Application #
10028932
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZRG1)
Program Officer
Anderson, Vernon
Project Start
2020-09-01
Project End
2025-08-31
Budget Start
2020-09-01
Budget End
2021-08-31
Support Year
1
Fiscal Year
2020
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
Children's Hospital of Philadelphia
Department
Type
DUNS #
073757627
City
Philadelphia
State
PA
Country
United States
Zip Code
19146