1. Differential roles of epigenetic changes and Foxp3 expression in regulatory T cell-specific transcriptional regulation.
- Author
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Hiromasa Morikawa, Naganari Ohkura, Alexis Vandenbon, Masayoshi ltoh, Sayaka Nagao-Sato, Hideya Kawaji, Timo Lassmann, Piero Carninci, Yoshihide Hayashizaki, Forrest, Alistair R. R., Standley, Daron M., Hiroshi Date, and Shimon Sakaguchi
- Subjects
EPIGENETICS ,GENE expression ,T cells ,TRANSCRIPTION factors ,IMMUNOLOGY - Abstract
Naturally occurring regulatory T (Treg) cells, which specifically express the transcription factor forkhead box P3 (Foxp3), are engaged in the maintenance of immunological self-tolerance and homeostasis. By transcriptional start site cluster analysis, we assessed here how genome-wide patterns of DNA methylation or Foxp3 binding sites were associated with Trug-specific gene expression. We found that Treg-specific DNA hypornethylated regions were closely associated with Treg up-regulated transcriptional start site clusters, whereas Foxp3 binding regions had no significant correlation with either up-or down-regulated clusters in nonactivated Treg cells. However, in activated Treg cells, Foxp3 binding regions showed a strong correlation with down-regulated clusters. In accordance with these findings, the above two features of activation-dependent gene regulation in Treg cells tend to occur at different locations in the genome. The results collectively indicate that Treg-specific DNA hypomethylation is instrumental in gene up-regulation in steady state Treg cells, whereas Foxp3 down-regulates the expression of its target genes in activated Treg cells. Thus, the two events seem to play distinct but complementary roles in Treg-specific gene expression. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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