Abstract Gonadal sex determination is controlled by the support cells of testes and ovaries. In testes, the epigenetic mechanism that maintains cellular memory to suppress female sexual differentiation remains unknown. Here, we show that Polycomb suppresses a female gene regulatory network in Sertoli cells, the specific support cells for postnatal testes. Through genetic ablation, we removed Polycomb repressive complex 1 (PRC1) from embryonic Sertoli cells after sex determination. PRC1-depleted postnatal Sertoli cells exhibited defective proliferation and cell death, leading to the degeneration of adult testes. In adult Sertoli cells, PRC1 suppressed the specific, critical genes required for granulosa cells, the support cells of ovaries, thereby inactivating the female gene regulatory network. The underlying chromatin of female genes was coated with Polycomb-mediated repressive modifications: PRC1-mediated H2AK119ub and PRC2-mediated H3K27me3. Taken together, we identify a critical mechanism centered on Polycomb that maintains the male fate in adult testes.
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