TY - JOUR
T1 - Auricular malformations are driven by copy number variations in a hierarchical enhancer cluster and a dominant enhancer recapitulates human pathogenesis
AU - Xu, Xiaopeng
AU - Chen, Qi
AU - Huang, Qingpei
AU - Cox, Timothy C.
AU - Zhu, Hao
AU - Hu, Jintian
AU - Han, Xi
AU - Meng, Ziqiu
AU - Wang, Bingqing
AU - Liao, Zhiying
AU - Xu, Wenxin
AU - Xiao, Baichuan
AU - Lang, Ruirui
AU - Liu, Jiqiang
AU - Huang, Jian
AU - Tang, Xiaokai
AU - Wang, Jinmo
AU - Li, Qiang
AU - Liu, Ting
AU - Zhang, Qingguo
AU - Antonarakis, Stylianos E.
AU - Zhang, Jiao
AU - Fan, Xiaoying
AU - Liu, Huisheng
AU - Zhang, Yong Biao
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2025.
PY - 2025/12
Y1 - 2025/12
N2 - Enhancers, through the combinatorial action of transcription factors (TFs), dictate both the spatial specificity and the levels of gene expression, and their aberrations can result in diseases. While a HMX1 downstream enhancer is associated with ear malformations, the mechanisms underlying bilateral constricted ear (BCE) remain unclear. Here, we identify a copy number variation (CNV) containing three enhancers—collectively termed the positional identity hierarchical enhancer cluster (PI-HEC)—that drives BCE by coordinately regulating HMX1 expression. Each enhancer exhibits distinct activity-location-structure features, and the dominant enhancer with high mobility group (HMG)-box combined with Coordinator and homeodomain TF motifs modulating its activity and specificity, respectively. Mouse models demonstrate that neural crest-derived fibroblasts with aberrant Hmx1 expression in the basal pinna, along with ectopic distal pinna expression, disrupt outer ear development, affecting cartilage, muscle, and epidermis. Our findings elucidate mammalian ear morphogenesis and underscore the complexity of synergistic regulation among enhancers and between enhancers and transcription factors.
AB - Enhancers, through the combinatorial action of transcription factors (TFs), dictate both the spatial specificity and the levels of gene expression, and their aberrations can result in diseases. While a HMX1 downstream enhancer is associated with ear malformations, the mechanisms underlying bilateral constricted ear (BCE) remain unclear. Here, we identify a copy number variation (CNV) containing three enhancers—collectively termed the positional identity hierarchical enhancer cluster (PI-HEC)—that drives BCE by coordinately regulating HMX1 expression. Each enhancer exhibits distinct activity-location-structure features, and the dominant enhancer with high mobility group (HMG)-box combined with Coordinator and homeodomain TF motifs modulating its activity and specificity, respectively. Mouse models demonstrate that neural crest-derived fibroblasts with aberrant Hmx1 expression in the basal pinna, along with ectopic distal pinna expression, disrupt outer ear development, affecting cartilage, muscle, and epidermis. Our findings elucidate mammalian ear morphogenesis and underscore the complexity of synergistic regulation among enhancers and between enhancers and transcription factors.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105005466513
U2 - 10.1038/s41467-025-59735-w
DO - 10.1038/s41467-025-59735-w
M3 - 文章
C2 - 40382324
AN - SCOPUS:105005466513
SN - 2041-1723
VL - 16
JO - Nature Communications
JF - Nature Communications
IS - 1
M1 - 4598
ER -