BAHCC1 promotes gene expression in neuronal cells by antagonizing SIN3A-HDAC1

Alan Monziani, Rotem Ben Tov Perry, Hadas Hezroni, Igor Ulitsky*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Chromatin modifications play a key role in regulating gene expression during development and adult physiology. Histone acetylation, particularly H3K27ac, is associated with increased activity of gene regulatory elements such as enhancers and promoters. However, the regulation of the machinery that writes, reads, and erases this modification remains poorly understood. In particular, the SIN3A-HDAC1 complex possesses histone deacetylase activity, yet it commonly resides at active regulatory regions. Here, we study BAHCC1, a large chromatin-associated protein essential for viability and recently reported to play a largely repressive role. We show that in neuronal lineage cells, BAHCC1 is mainly associated with regulatory elements marked with H3K27ac. BAHCC1 interacts and co-occupies shared genomic regions with the SIN3A scaffold protein, but not with its paralog SIN3B, and its perturbations lead to altered acetylation and expression of proximal genes in a neuronal cell line and primary cortical neurons. The regulated genes are enriched for those functioning in neurogenesis and cell migration, and primary cortical neurons with reduced Bahcc1 expression display impaired neurite outgrowth. We thus propose a model in which BAHCC1 antagonizes SIN3A histone deacetylation and positively regulates the expression of genes that are important for growth and migration-related processes in the neuronal lineage.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbergkaf650
Number of pages19
JournalNucleic Acids Research
Volume53
Issue number14
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 12 Aug 2025

Funding

This work was supported by the ERC Consolidator Grant lnc IMPACT to IU and by the Helen and Martin Kimmel In- stitute for Stem Cell research. Funding to pay the Open Ac- cess publication charges for this article was provided by ERC grant. thank members of the Ulitsky lab for insightful discus- sions and comments on the manuscript. We thank Meital Ku- pervaser (de Botton Institute for Protein Profiling, The Nancy and Stephen Grand Israel National Center for Personalized Medicine, Weizmann Institute of Science) for helping and an- alyzing the mass spectrometry data. We thank Ida Rishal for technical help with neurite length experiments.

All Science Journal Classification (ASJC) codes

  • Genetics

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