Opposing gene regulatory programs governing myofiber development and maturation revealed at single nucleus resolution

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Abstract

Skeletal muscle fibers express distinct gene programs during development and maturation, but the underlying gene regulatory networks that confer stage-specific myofiber properties remain unknown. To decipher these distinctive gene programs and how they respond to neural activity, we generated a combined multi-omic single-nucleus RNA-seq and ATAC-seq atlas of mouse skeletal muscle development at multiple stages of embryonic, fetal, and postnatal life. We found that Myogenin, Klf5, and Tead4 form a transcriptional complex that synergistically activates the expression of muscle genes in developing myofibers. During myofiber maturation, the transcription factor Maf acts as a transcriptional switch to activate the mature fast muscle gene program. In skeletal muscles of mutant mice lacking voltage-gated L-type Ca2+ channels (Cav1.1), Maf expression and myofiber maturation are impaired. These findings provide a transcriptional atlas of muscle development and reveal genetic links between myofiber formation, maturation, and contraction.

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Dos Santos, M., Shah, A. M., Zhang, Y., Bezprozvannaya, S., Chen, K., Xu, L., … Olson, E. N. (2023). Opposing gene regulatory programs governing myofiber development and maturation revealed at single nucleus resolution. Nature Communications, 14(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-40073-8

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