scholarly journals The transcription factor Ets1 is important for CD4 repression and Runx3 up-regulation during CD8 T cell differentiation in the thymus

2009 ◽  
Vol 206 (12) ◽  
pp. 2685-2699 ◽  
Author(s):  
Monica Zamisch ◽  
Linhua Tian ◽  
Roland Grenningloh ◽  
Yumei Xiong ◽  
Kathryn F. Wildt ◽  
...  

The transcription factor Ets1 contributes to the differentiation of CD8 lineage cells in the thymus, but how it does so is not understood. In this study, we demonstrate that Ets1 is required for the proper termination of CD4 expression during the differentiation of major histocompatability class 1 (MHC I)–restricted thymocytes, but not for other events associated with their positive selection, including the initiation of cytotoxic gene expression, corticomedullary migration, or thymus exit. We further show that Ets1 promotes expression of Runx3, a transcription factor important for CD8 T cell differentiation and the cessation of Cd4 gene expression. Enforced Runx3 expression in Ets1-deficient MHC I–restricted thymocytes largely rescued their impaired Cd4 silencing, indicating that Ets1 is not required for Runx3 function. Finally, we document that Ets1 binds at least two evolutionarily conserved regions within the Runx3 gene in vivo, supporting the possibility that Ets1 directly contributes to Runx3 transcription. These findings identify Ets1 as a key player during CD8 lineage differentiation and indicate that it acts, at least in part, by promoting Runx3 expression.

Blood ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 122 (21) ◽  
pp. 189-189
Author(s):  
R. Anthony Barnitz ◽  
Makoto Kurachi ◽  
Madeleine E. Lemieux ◽  
Nir Yosef ◽  
Michael A. DiIorio ◽  
...  

Abstract Following activation by antigen, costimulation, and inflammation, naïve CD8+ T cells initiate a program of clonal expansion and differentiation resulting in wide-spread changes in expression of genes involved in cell-cycle, metabolism, effector function, apoptosis, and homing. Although, several key transcription factors (TFs) have been shown to be important in effector CD8+ T cell differentiation, the precise transcriptional regulation of this differentiation program remains poorly understood. The AP-1 family member BATF plays an important role in regulating differentiation and function in CD4+ Th17 cells, CD4+ follicular helper T cells, and in Ig class switching in B cells. We now show that BATF is also required for effector CD8+ T cell differentiation and regulates a core program of genes involved in effector differentiation. We found that BATF expression is rapidly up-regulated during effector CD8+ T cell differentiation in the mouse model of lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV) infection. To examine the role of BATF in effector differentiation, we studied congenically distinct wild type (WT) and BATF knockout (KO) naïve P14 TCR transgenic CD8+ T cells co- transferred into a WT host. Upon infection, the BATF KO cells exhibited a profound, cell-intrinsic defect in effector CD8+ T cell differentiation, with a ∼400-fold decrease in peak number of effector cells. BATF KO effectors showed sustained activation and increased cell death by the mid-expansion phase of the immune response. To address the question of how loss of BATF causes such a severely diminished antigen-specific response, we profiled the binding sites of BATF throughout the genome by chromatin immunoprecipitation and high-throughput sequencing (ChIP-seq) in primary CD8+ effector cells. We found that BATF bound to regulatory regions in many genes critical for effector differentiation, including transcription factors (e.g. Tbx21, Eomes, Prdm1), genes involved in cytokine signaling (e.g. Il12rb2, Il2ra), homing (e.g. Sell, Selp, Ccr9), effector function (e.g. Gzmb, Ifng, Il2), apoptosis (e.g. Bcl2, Bcl2l1, Mcl1), and T cell activation (e.g. Ctla4, Cd247, Tnfrsf4), suggesting a major role for BATF in effector CD8+ T cell differentiation. Indeed, we found that genes bound by BATF were highly significantly overrepresented among genes that changed as a result of naïve CD8+ T cells differentiating into effectors in vivo (P = 10-27). Comparison of gene expression in in vitro WT and BATF KO effectors confirmed that BATF bound genes were perturbed by BATF loss of function. Analysis of the kinetics of gene expression during the first 72 hours of effector differentiation showed that loss of BATF perturbed the temporal sequence of expression of critical transcription factors, such as T-bet and Eomes, and resulted in inappropriately early cytokine expression. This suggests that BATF may be required to coordinate the earliest events in CD8+ T cell effector differentiation. To test this hypothesis, we used in vivo CFSE tracking to follow the early CD8+ T cell response during LCMV infection. We found that while BATF KO CD8+ T cells initiate cell division, there was a dramatic collapse in the ability to sustain proliferation and differentiation as early as day 3 post-infection. These results indicate that BATF ensures the orderly progression of a program of genes required by effector cells, restraining the expression of some and promoting the expression of others. More broadly, our results suggest that BATF may provide a common regulatory infrastructure for the development of effector cells in all T cell lineages. Disclosures: Wherry: Genentech: Patents & Royalties.


2015 ◽  
Vol 11 (3) ◽  
pp. e1004740 ◽  
Author(s):  
James M. Billingsley ◽  
Premeela A. Rajakumar ◽  
Michelle A. Connole ◽  
Nadine C. Salisch ◽  
Sama Adnan ◽  
...  

Immunity ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 41 (2) ◽  
pp. 325-338 ◽  
Author(s):  
Runqiang Chen ◽  
Simon Bélanger ◽  
Megan A. Frederick ◽  
Bin Li ◽  
Robert J. Johnston ◽  
...  

2010 ◽  
Vol 40 (5) ◽  
pp. 1303-1314 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carsten Gründemann ◽  
Sabrina Schwartzkopff ◽  
Marie Koschella ◽  
Oliver Schweier ◽  
Christoph Peters ◽  
...  

Blood ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 104 (11) ◽  
pp. 344-344 ◽  
Author(s):  
Frank Rosenbauer ◽  
Ulrich Steidl ◽  
Bronwyn Owens ◽  
Linda Clayton ◽  
Katharina Wagner ◽  
...  

Abstract The transcription factor PU.1 is indispensable for the generation of myeloid and B-lymphoid cells. PU.1 expression is highly regulated, and enforced expression of PU.1 in early erythroid or T-cell progenitors leads to erythroleukemia or an early block in T-cell differentiation, respectively. While PU.1 function in hematopoietic differentiation is well characterized, the regulation of the PU.1 gene is still poorly understood. We previously identified a -14 kb upstream regulatory element (URE) in the PU.1 gene. Replacement of this element with a neomycin cassette led to mice with hypomorphic PU.1 alleles, and uncovered a dosage effect of this lineage specific transcription factor in acute myeloid leukemia. However, since insertion of a neomycin gene might interfere with PU.1 expression, it was excised from the genome to eliminate any effects other than deletion of the URE. We found that UREΔ/Δ animals exhibited markedly decreased PU.1 expression in multiple lineages, resulting in a profound reduction in macrophage and B-cell numbers in bone marrow and spleen. Thus, normal PU.1 levels are required for development of both lineages in vivo. Furthermore, UREΔ/Δ animals exhibited decreased thymocyte numbers due to a partial block in double negative T-cell differentiation at the transition from DN1/2 to DN3/4 cells. Within a period of 3 to 8 months, many animals developed aggressive, clonal, lymphoblastic T-cell lymphomas, which were dominant over the myeloid leukemia in this model. Gene profiling analysis of early thymocyte populations sorted from preleukemic mice revealed several key genes known to be involved in normal T-cell development and transformation. The role of these novel PU.1 downstream targets is currently being analyzed and the data will be presented. Together, this murine model demonstrates (1) a crucial function of the URE for endogenous PU.1 expression, and (2) a PU.1 dosage effect in the induction of fatal T-cell malignancies. These results show that deletion of a key regulatory element can be a sufficient event for malignant transformation, thus highlighting the need to increase the search for such elements in tumor suppressor genes and proto-oncogenes and to validate their contribution to human disease.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Juan Fernandez-Garcia ◽  
Fabien Franco ◽  
Sweta Parik ◽  
Antonino A Pane ◽  
Dorien Broekaert ◽  
...  

Cytotoxic T cells dynamically rewire their metabolism during the course of an immune response. While T cell metabolism has been extensively studied at phenotypic endpoints of activation and differentiation, the underlying dynamics remain largely elusive. Here, we leverage on single-cell RNA-sequencing (scRNA-seq) measurements of in vitro activated and differentiated CD8+ T cells cultured in physiological media to resolve these metabolic dynamics. We find that our scRNA-seq analysis identifies most metabolic changes previously defined in in vivo experiments, such as a rewiring from an oxidative to an anabolism-promoting metabolic program during activation to an effector state, which is later reverted upon memory polarization. Importantly, our scRNA-seq data further provide a dynamic description of these changes. In this sense, our data predict a differential time-dependent reliance of CD8+ T cells on the synthesis versus uptake of various non-essential amino acids during T cell activation, which we corroborate with additional functional in vitro experiments. We further exploit our scRNA-seq data to identify metabolic genes that could potentially dictate the outcome of T cell differentiation, by ranking them based on their expression dynamics. Among the highest-ranked hits, we find asparagine synthetase (Asns), whose expression sharply peaks for effector CD8+ T cells and further decays towards memory polarization. We then confirm that these in vitro Asns expression dynamics are representative of an in vivo situation in a mouse model of viral infection. Moreover, we find that disrupting these expression dynamics in vitro, by depleting asparagine from the culture media, delays central-memory polarization. Accordingly, we find that preventing the decay of ASNS by stable overexpression at the protein level in vivo leads to a significant increase in effector CD8+ T cell expansion, and a concomitant decrease in central-memory formation, in a mouse model of viral infection. This shows that ASNS expression dynamics dictate the fate of CD8+ T cell differentiation. In conclusion, we provide a resource of dynamic expression changes during CD8+ T cell activation and differentiation that is expected to increase our understanding of the dynamic metabolic requirements of T cells progressing along the immune response cascade.


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