%0 Journal Article %T The endogenous retrovirus ENS-1 provides active binding sites for transcription factors in embryonic stem cells that specify extra embryonic tissue %A Anne Mey %A Herv¨¦ Acloque %A Emmanuelle Lerat %A S¨¦bastien Gounel %A Violaine Tribollet %A Sophie Blanc %A Damien Curton %A Anne-Marie Birot %A M Angela Nieto %A Jacques Samarut %J Retrovirology %D 2012 %I BioMed Central %R 10.1186/1742-4690-9-21 %X We show that Ens-1 LTR activity is controlled by two transcriptional pathways that drive pluripotent cells to alternative developmental fates. Indeed, both Nanog that maintains pluripotency and Gata4 that induces differentiation toward extraembryonic endoderm independently activate the LTR. Ets coactivators are required to support Gata factors' activity thus preventing inappropriate activation before epigenetic silencing occurs during differentiation. Consistent with their expression patterns during chick embryonic development, Gata4, Nanog and Ets1 are recruited on the LTR in embryonic stem cells; in the epiblast the complementary expression of Nanog and Gata/Ets correlates with the Ens-1 gene expression pattern; and Ens-1 transcripts are also detected in the hypoblast, an extraembryonic tissue expressing Gata4 and Ets2, but not Nanog. Accordingly, over expression of Gata4 in embryos induces an ectopic expression of Ens-1.Our results show that Ens-1 LTR have co-opted conditions required for the emergence of extraembryonic tissues from pluripotent epiblasts cells. By providing pluripotent cells with intact binding sites for Gata, Nanog, or both, Ens-1 LTR may promote distinct transcriptional networks in embryonic stem cells subpopulations and prime the separation between embryonic and extraembryonic fates.Long terminal repeats (LTR) from endogenous retroviruses (ERV) are remnants of transposable elements disseminated in the genome that contain promoter activity [1] and can control nearby genes in different organisms [2-5]. They represent a source of binding sites for transcription factors [6], and some that are active in embryonic stem (ES) cells have been shown to rewire the Nanog and Oct3/4 transcriptional networks in a species-specific manner [7]. Whether these changes are neutral or reflect species-specific adaptation to conserved developmental processes is not known, but ERV that escape silencing in pluripotent cells have been described in several species [4,8] %U http://www.retrovirology.com/content/9/1/21