ETV2-ECSCR-mTOR pathways regulate reprogramming to the endothelial lineage

Scritto il 07/02/2026
da Young Geun Choi

Stem Cells. 2026 Feb 6:sxaf075. doi: 10.1093/stmcls/sxaf075. Online ahead of print.

ABSTRACT

ETV2 is a pioneer factor that regulates cell fate decisions and direct reprogramming of the endothelial lineage. While ETV2 drives the cell fate conversion through epigenetic remodeling, its downstream targets also contribute to ETV2-mediated cell fate conversion. In this study, we defined Ecscr as a direct transcriptional target of ETV2 and a key regulator of ETV2-mediated cell reprogramming. Single-cell RNA sequencing analyses of ETV2-overexpressing embryoid body differentiation and embryonic fibroblast reprogramming revealed upregulation of Ecscr in ETV2-induced cell populations. ATAC-seq, ChIP-seq, gel shift, and transcriptional assays confirmed ETV2 binding to the Ecscr gene. In vivo analyses using 3.9 kb-Etv2-EYFP reporter transgenic mice and Etv2 null mice, in combination with single-cell RNA-seq of developing mouse embryos, further validated Ecscr as an ETV2 downstream target. Functionally, the knockdown of Ecscr significantly enhanced reprogramming rate, suggesting that Ecscr functions in a feedback mechanism to decrease the ETV2-mediated cell fate conversion. Mechanistically, Ecscr knockdown led to upregulation of Rptor, a core component of mTORC1 complex. The inhibition of mTORC1 signaling with rapamycin partially reversed the effect, supporting the notion that mTORC1 functions as a downstream mediator. Our findings uncover a novel ETV2 downstream target ECSCR that modulates ETV2-driven reprogramming through mTORC1 regulation, offering a target to improve endothelial reprogramming for regenerative applications.

PMID:41652899 | DOI:10.1093/stmcls/sxaf075