Linking epigenetics and metabolism in neurogenesis!
Epigenetic regulation and metabolism are tightly coordinated during progenitor cell growth but the processes linking this crosstalk is not well understood.
The researchers examined in neural stem cells the role of PHF8, a histone demethylase whose mutations are linked to Siderius-Hamel syndrome, a rare neurodevelopmental disorder.
The authors show that PHF8 regulates neural progenitor proliferation by coordinating epigenetic and metabolic programs and drives serine biosynthesis by maintaining chromatin accessibility of serine synthesis genes.
They also demonstrate that loss of PHF8 disrupts metabolism, autophagy, and vesicle formation and its deficiency leads to DNA damage and halts neurogenesis in vivo. sciencenewshighlights ScienceMission https://sciencemission.com/Epigenetic-regulation-of-serine-biosynthesis
Progenitor proliferation during neurodevelopment requires tight coordination of epigenetic regulation and metabolism. However, the crosstalk between these processes remains poorly understood. To investigate this, we examine in neural stem cells the role of PHF8, a histone demethylase whose mutations are linked to Siderius-Hamel syndrome, a rare neurodevelopmental disorder. Through an integrated multi-omics approach — combining transcriptomics, epigenomics, and metabolomics — we identify PHF8 as a key driver of the serine biosynthesis pathway, safeguarding the intracellular serine pool essential for neural progenitor proliferation. PHF8 fine-tunes chromatin accessibility at promoters of metabolic genes, ensuring their activation during development. Loss of PHF8 disrupts amino acid metabolism, blocks autophagy, and hinders vesicle formation.








