| Literature DB >> 25943594 |
Jennifer Dunn1, Robert McCuaig2, Wen Juan Tu3, Kristine Hardy4, Sudha Rao5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Immunological memory is the ability of the immune system to respond more rapidly and effectively to previously encountered pathogens, a key feature of adaptive immunity. The capacity of memory T cells to "remember" previous cellular responses to specific antigens ultimately resides in their unique patterns of gene expression. Following re-exposure to an antigen, previously activated genes are transcribed more rapidly and robustly in memory T cells compared to their naïve counterparts. The ability for cells to remember past transcriptional responses is termed "adaptive transcriptional memory".Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25943594 PMCID: PMC4422045 DOI: 10.1186/s12865-015-0089-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Immunol ISSN: 1471-2172 Impact factor: 3.615
Summary of epigenetic mechanisms and their role in memory cell development
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| Acetylation | Memory CD4+/CD8+ T cells | ▪ Marks memory responsive genes for rapid reactivation | [ |
| ▪ Form stable marks of transcriptional activation that are retained in memory T cells | [ | ||
| Methylation | Memory CD4+/CD8+ T cells | ▪ Loss of repressive histone methylation marks at active genes are preserved in memory T cells to facilitate faster transcription of target genes | [ |
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| H3.3 | mES cells | ▪ Marks gene enhancers for rapid reactivation | [ |
| ▪ Primes genes for transcription by destabilising nucleosome structure to facilitate recruitment of transcription factors | |||
| Xenopus | ▪ Required for transcriptional memory following somatic cell transfer | [ | |
| pre-B cells | ▪ Forms stable marks of transcriptional activity that persist through cell division | [ | |
| H2A.Z | Yeast/CD4+ T cells | ▪ Destabilises chromatin structure to facilitate recruitment of transcription machinery | [ |
| Yeast | ▪ Regulates the localisation of recently repressed genes to the nuclear periphery to facilitate transcriptional memory | [ | |
| H2A.Lap1 | Mouse testis cells | ▪ Selectively recruited at the TSS of active genes to destabilise nucleosomal structure and facilitate transcriptional reactivation | [ |
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| STAT3 | Memory CD8+ T cells | ▪ Regulates the expression of pro-memory transcription factors essential for generation of memory T cells | [ |
| Tcf1 | Memory CD8+ T cells | ▪ Regulates memory T cell formation and immune responses through the induction of Eomesodermines and regulation of pro-memory transcription factors | [ |
| FOXO1 | Memory CD8+ T cells | ▪ Translocates into the cell nucleus to regulate the transcription of numerous pro-memory transcription factors | [ |
| NFAT | Memory CD4+ T cells | ▪ Regulates transcription of genes that are critical for memory T cell development | [ |
| NF-κB | Memory T cells | ▪ Regulates transcription of genes that are critical for memory T cell development | [ |
| RBPJ | Murine Carcinoma F9 cells | ▪ Regulates chromatin domains and long-range chromatin interactions to maintain gene expression programs in transcriptional memory | [ |
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| PKC-θ | T cells | ▪ Key regulator of IL-2 expression (a critical cytokine for memory T cell development) | [ |
| mTOR kinase | CD8+ T cell | ▪ Regulates memory CD8 T-cell differentiation through the transcription factors T-bet and Eomesodermin. | [ |
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| SWI/SNF | Yeast | ▪ Prevents ISWI-based enzymes from erasing transcriptional memory | [ |
| Nuclear Pore Proteins (Nup100) | Yeast | ▪ Nup100 interacts with the promoter for yeast gene INO1 to regulate transcriptional memory. | [ |
| piRNAs | C.Elegans | ▪ Regulate a multigenerational epigenetic inheritance mechanism. | [ |
ncRNA = non coding RNA; NPC = Nuclear Pore Complex.
Figure 1Model depicting the existence of T cells in distinct chromatin states in transcriptional memory responsive genes that allow for rapid and robust gene induction in memory T cells. In response to viral infection, naïve T-cells rapidly expand into effector T-cells and subsequently contract to produce a small population of resting, long-lived memory T cells. These memory cells have the ability to express genes more rapidly and robustly than effector T-cells; a feature known as transcriptional memory (Tm). In this multi-layered model of transcriptional memory, we envisage a scenario whereby multiple epigenetic mechanisms, such as PTMs, histone variants, transcription factors, gene looping, localisation of genes within the nucleus, and the regulatory elements themselves, collectively contribute to the transcriptional memory response in T cells. In the above Figure, H3/H2A nucleosomes are represented by blue cylinders and repressive PTMs are red balls; H2AZ/H3.3 nucleosomes are represented by red cylinders and active PTMs are signified by green, purple or blue coloured balls. The active transcription complex (ATC) is signified by an orange oval and the active enhancer complex (AEC) by a tan oval, each representing transcription factors (TF), PKC-θ, LSD1, Pol II and other unidentified members which are bound to the promoter region/TSS (TSS signified by a yellow box) or enhancer region (signified by a green box). The purple oval represents the memory transcription factors (M-TF). The memory complex (MC) is signified by a red oval representing unidentified members and Pol II. The above Figure also depicts the formation of a chromatin loop following activation, which allows the enhancer to interact with promoter. The chromatin loop relocates to the nuclear periphery upon activation, were it remains in resting memory T cells.