KDM6A/UTX promotes spermatogenic gene expression across generations and is not required for male fertility

BW Walters, SR Rainsford, RA Heuer, N Dias, XF Huang, D de Rooij, BJ Lesch*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Paternal chromatin undergoes extensive structural and epigenetic changes during mammalian spermatogenesis, producing sperm with an epigenome optimized for the transition to embryogenesis. Lysine demethylase 6a (KDM6A, also called UTX) promotes gene activation in part via demethylation of H3K27me3, a developmentally important repressive modification abundant throughout the epigenome of spermatogenic cells and sperm. We previously demonstrated increased cancer risk in genetically wild-type mice derived from a paternal germ line lacking Kdm6a (Kdm6a cKO), indicating a role for KDM6A in regulating heritable epigenetic states. However, the regulatory function of KDM6A during spermatogenesis is not known. Here, we show that Kdm6a is transiently expressed in spermatogenesis, with RNA and protein expression largely limited to late spermatogonia and early meiotic prophase. Kdm6a cKO males do not have defects in fertility or the overall progression of spermatogenesis. However, hundreds of genes are deregulated upon loss of Kdm6a in spermatogenic cells, with a strong bias toward downregulation coinciding with the time when Kdm6a is expressed. Misregulated genes encode factors involved in chromatin organization and regulation of repetitive elements, and a subset of these genes was persistently deregulated in the male germ line across two generations of offspring of Kdm6a cKO males. Genome-wide epigenetic profiling revealed broadening of H3K27me3 peaks in differentiating spermatogonia of Kdm6a cKO mice, suggesting that KDM6A demarcates H3K27me3 domains in the male germ line. Our findings highlight KDM6A as a transcriptional activator in the mammalian male germ line that is dispensable for spermatogenesis but important for safeguarding gene regulatory state intergenerationally.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)391-407
Number of pages17
JournalBiology of Reproduction
Volume110
Issue number2
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 10 Feb 2024

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Society for the Study of Reproduction. All rights reserved.

Funding

We thank P. Reddi for the gift of the ACRV1 antibody. We appreciate the technical assistance provided by Aushaq Malla, Allison Cho, Delaney Farris, Zachary Smith, and Jake Reske, and the help from the Yale Center for Genome Analysis for high-throughput sequencing. BWW is a Hope Funds for Cancer Research Fellow supported by the Hope Funds for Cancer Research (HFCR 22-03-04). We thank P. Reddi for the gift of the ACRV1 antibody. We appreciate the technical assistance provided by Aushaq Malla, Allison Cho, Delaney Farris, Zachary Smith, and Jake Reske, and the help from the Yale Center for Genome Analysis for high-throughput sequencing. BWW is a Hope Funds for Cancer Research Fellow supported by the Hope Funds for Cancer Research (HFCR 22-03-04). Grant Support: This work was supported by funding from the National Institutes of Health/National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (R01HD098128), by a Career Enhancement Program Grant from the Yale SPORE in Lung Cancer (P50CA196530), by a Pew Biomedical Scholar Award from the Pew Charitable Trusts to BJL (GR-000010759). BWW is a Hope Funds for Cancer Research Fellow supported by the Hope Funds for Cancer Research (HFCR 22-03-04).

FundersFunder number
Yale Center for Genome Analysis
National Institutes of Health
National Institute of Child Health and Human DevelopmentP50CA196530, R01HD098128
Pew Charitable TrustsGR-000010759
Hope Funds for Cancer ResearchHFCR 22-03-04

    Keywords

    • Chromatin
    • Epigenetics
    • Kdm6a
    • Spermatogenesis
    • Transgenerational
    • Utx

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