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Fig. 4. HDAC inhibition prevents the shutdown of lymphocyte-specific genes during reprogramming. (A) Impact of 20 nM TSA treatment on the expression of hCD45, hPAX5, hCD20 and hCD37 in interspecies hBxC2 heterokaryons. Green boxes highlight that lymphocyte-associated genes are not extinguished following TSA treatment. (B) Expression of hPAX6, hREX1, hTERT, hNANOG and hOCT4 in human B lymphocytes (hB) and in day 4 (d4) and day 7 (d7) hBxC2 heterokaryons cultured in the presence (+) or absence () of 20 nM TSA. As positive controls for PCR analysis (hC+), RNA was isolated from human embryonic stem cells (for hOCT4, hNANOG, hREX1, hTERT) and human neuronal progenitor cells (for hPAX6), and hGAPDH was used to standardise input. Mouse ES cells (C-mES) and mouse C2C12 cells (C-mC2), used as negative controls to confirm the specificity of primers to human transcripts, are shown on the right. (C) RT-PCR analysis of mouse transcripts for mMash1, mNeuroD, mNurr1, mPax2, mEngrailed1, mShh (neural-associated) and mCD45, mRag1, mCD4, mLambda-5, mCD19 (lymphocyte-associated) in mouse myoblasts and myotubes cultured in absence or in presence of 20 nM TSA. Positive controls in this analysis include RNA isolated from mouse brain and foetal liver (mC+); mHPRT was used to standardise input. The sequence of human- or mouse-specific pairs of primers used for PCR amplification is available upon request. (D) Increased levels of histone H3 Lys9 acetylation (H3K9ac) in human nuclei in response to treatment of heterokaryons with 20 nM TSA (+). Confocal microscope settings and laser power were kept constant so that the relative abundance of H3K9 acetylation could be directly compared (and quantified, right hand panel) to untreated control (mean ± s.d., 50 nuclei per experiment). Bar, 10 µm.
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