You are here

Kctd15 regulates nephron segment development by repressing Tfap2a activity

Authors: 
Chambers BE, Clark EG, Gatz AE, Wingert RA
Citation: 
bioRxiv. 2020;[preprint] doi:10.1101/2020.01.17.910760
Abstract: 
A functional vertebrate kidney relies on structural units called nephrons, which are epithelial tubules that contain a sequence of segments each expressing a distinct repertoire of solute transporters. To date, the transcriptional codes driving regional specification, solute transporter program activation, and terminal differentiation of segment populations remain poorly understood. We demonstrate for the first time that the KCTD15 paralogs, kctd15a and kctd15b, function in concert to restrict distal early (DE)/thick ascending limb (TAL) segment lineage assignment in the developing zebrafish pronephros by repressing Tfap2a activity. During renal ontogeny, expression of these factors co-localized with tfap2a in distal tubule precursors. kctd15 loss primed nephron cells to adopt distal fates by driving expansions in slc12a1, kcnj1a.1, and stc1 marker expression. These phenotypes were resultant of Tfap2a hyperactivity, where kctd15a/b-deficient embryos exhibited increased abundance of this transcription factor. Interestingly, tfap2a reciprocally promoted kctd15 transcription, unveiling a circuit of autoregulation operating in nephron progenitors. Concomitant kctd15b knockdown with tfap2a overexpression produced genetic synergy and further expanded the DE population. Our study provides strong evidence that a transcription factor-repressor feedback module employs tight regulation of Tfap2a and Kctd15 kinetics to control nephron segment fate choice and differentiation during kidney development.
Epub: 
Not Epub
Organism or Cell Type: 
zebrafish
Delivery Method: 
microinjection