| Literature DB >> 30814730 |
Xindong Liu1, Yun Wang2, Huiping Lu3, Jing Li3, Xiaowei Yan4, Minglu Xiao5, Jing Hao3, Andrei Alekseev6, Hiep Khong6, Tenghui Chen6, Rui Huang2, Jin Wu2, Qiwen Zhao2, Qi Wu3, Senlin Xu2, Xiaohu Wang3, Wei Jin3, Shicang Yu2, Yan Wang2, Lai Wei7, Aibo Wang6, Bo Zhong8, Ling Ni3, Xiaolong Liu9, Roza Nurieva6, Lilin Ye5, Qiang Tian4, Xiu-Wu Bian10, Chen Dong11.
Abstract
T cells become dysfunctional when they encounter self antigens or are exposed to chronic infection or to the tumour microenvironment1. The function of T cells is tightly regulated by a combinational co-stimulatory signal, and dominance of negative co-stimulation results in T cell dysfunction2. However, the molecular mechanisms that underlie this dysfunction remain unclear. Here, using an in vitro T cell tolerance induction system in mice, we characterize genome-wide epigenetic and gene expression features in tolerant T cells, and show that they are distinct from effector and regulatory T cells. Notably, the transcription factor NR4A1 is stably expressed at high levels in tolerant T cells. Overexpression of NR4A1 inhibits effector T cell differentiation, whereas deletion of NR4A1 overcomes T cell tolerance and exaggerates effector function, as well as enhancing immunity against tumour and chronic virus. Mechanistically, NR4A1 is preferentially recruited to binding sites of the transcription factor AP-1, where it represses effector-gene expression by inhibiting AP-1 function. NR4A1 binding also promotes acetylation of histone 3 at lysine 27 (H3K27ac), leading to activation of tolerance-related genes. This study thus identifies NR4A1 as a key general regulator in the induction of T cell dysfunction, and a potential target for tumour immunotherapy.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 30814730 PMCID: PMC6507425 DOI: 10.1038/s41586-019-0979-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nature ISSN: 0028-0836 Impact factor: 49.962