Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, Vol.508, No.2, 556-562, 2019
Identification of Rfx6 target genes involved in pancreas development and insulin translation by ChIP-seq
Regulatory Factor X-box binding transcriptional factor 6 (Rfx6) plays an important role in the differentiation and development of pancreas in mammals. However, the direct target genes of Rfx6 to regulate this process were largely unknown. The present study aimed to investigate the function of Rfx6 on regulating pancreatic differentiation and development in a physiologically-relevant context. We performed the chromatin immunoprecipitation followed by the next generation sequencing analysis (ChIP-seq) using whole pancreatic tissue harvested from C57/BL6 adult mice to find target genes of Rfx6. We captured 4146 unique peaks in the genome region of the adult murine pancreas. Among all these binding peaks, a majority were located in intron or intergenic regions. We further annotated all peaks to their nearest gene, and over 1000 genes were captured as Rfx6-binding genes in the pancreas. Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes (KEGG) and Gene Ontology (GO) analysis found that Rfx6-binding genes to be associated with the pancreas developmental process. A portion of selected ChIP-seq targets related with pancreas differentiation including Pdx1, Neurod1, Hnf1a, Nkx6-1, St18 and Shox2 were selected and validated as true targets by independent qPCR experiments. In addition, Rfx6 can directly bind to upstream of MiR-145, MiR-195, and possibly other non-protein-coding functional RNAs to control adult mouse pancreatic differentiation. Interestingly, our study revealed that Rfx6 played an important role in insulin translation by binding to the Eif2ak1, Upf1, and Eif5. Our data provide direct target genes of Rfx6 during pancreas development and point to Rfx6 as a potential therapeutic target for improving insulin protein content. (C) 2018 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.