TY - JOUR T1 - Exposure to Mites Sensitizes Intestinal Stem Cell Maintenance, Splenic Marginal Zone B Cell Homeostasis, And Heart Development to Notch Dosage and Cooperativity JF - bioRxiv DO - 10.1101/2020.02.13.948224 SP - 2020.02.13.948224 AU - Francis M. Kobia AU - Kristina Preusse AU - Quanhui Dai AU - Nicholas Weaver AU - Praneet Chaturvedi AU - Sarah J. Stein AU - Warren S. Pear AU - Zhenyu Yuan AU - Rhett A. Kovall AU - Yi Kuang AU - Natanel Eafergen AU - David Sprinzak AU - Brian Gebelein AU - Eric Brunskill AU - Raphael Kopan Y1 - 2020/01/01 UR - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2020/03/06/2020.02.13.948224.abstract N2 - Cooperative DNA binding is a key feature of transcriptional regulation. Here we examined the role of cooperativity in Notch signaling by CRISPR-mediated engineering of mice in which neither Notch1 nor Notch2 can homo- or heterodimerize, essential for cooperative binding to sequence paired sites (SPS) located near many Notch-regulated genes. While most known Notch-dependent phenotypes were unaffected in Notch1/2 dimer-deficient mice, a subset of tissues proved highly sensitive to loss of cooperativity. These phenotypes include heart development, compromising viability in combination with low gene dose, and the gut, developing ulcerative colitis in response to 1% DSS. The most striking phenotypes – gender imbalance and splenic marginal zone B cell lymphoma – emerged in combination with dose reduction or when challenged by chronic fur mite infestation. This study highlights the role of the environment in malignancy and colitis, and is consistent with Notch-dependent anti-parasite immune responses being compromised in the dimer deficient animals.HighlightsNotch dimerization has an in vivo role in contributing to intestinal homeostasisLoss of cooperativity can manifest as Notch gain or loss of function phenotypesMite infestation exacerbates all phenotypes, triggers MZB hyperproliferation in mutant animalsMite-infested mutant mice develop SMZL with age ER -