| Literature DB >> 26216992 |
Hideyuki Yoshida1, Kushagra Bansal1, Uwe Schaefer2, Trevor Chapman3, Inmaculada Rioja3, Irina Proekt4, Mark S Anderson5, Rab K Prinjha3, Alexander Tarakhovsky2, Christophe Benoist6, Diane Mathis6.
Abstract
Aire controls immunologic tolerance by inducing a battery of thymic transcripts encoding proteins characteristic of peripheral tissues. Its unusually broad effect is achieved by releasing RNA polymerase II paused just downstream of transcriptional start sites. We explored Aire's collaboration with the bromodomain-containing protein, Brd4, uncovering an astonishing correspondence between those genes induced by Aire and those inhibited by a small-molecule bromodomain blocker. Aire:Brd4 binding depended on an orchestrated series of posttranslational modifications within Aire's caspase activation and recruitment domain. This interaction attracted P-TEFb, thereby mobilizing downstream transcriptional elongation and splicing machineries. Aire:Brd4 association was critical for tolerance induction, and its disruption could account for certain point mutations that provoke human autoimmune disease. Our findings evoke the possibility of unanticipated immunologic mechanisms subtending the potent antitumor effects of bromodomain blockers.Entities:
Keywords: Aire; bromodomain protein; immunological tolerance; thymus; transcriptional elongation
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26216992 PMCID: PMC4538633 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1512081112
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205