16 results on '"DiSpirito JR"'
Search Results
2. Analysis of the Pparg and Spi1 cistromes in mouse 3T3-L1 adipocytes
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Dispirito, JR, primary
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3. Obesity-Linked PPARγ S273 Phosphorylation Promotes Insulin Resistance through Growth Differentiation Factor 3.
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Hall JA, Ramachandran D, Roh HC, DiSpirito JR, Belchior T, Zushin PH, Palmer C, Hong S, Mina AI, Liu B, Deng Z, Aryal P, Jacobs C, Tenen D, Brown CW, Charles JF, Shulman GI, Kahn BB, Tsai LTY, Rosen ED, Spiegelman BM, and Banks AS
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- Alleles, Animals, Cells, Cultured, Growth Differentiation Factor 3 genetics, Humans, Insulin Resistance, Male, Mice, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Obesity metabolism, PPAR gamma genetics, Phosphorylation drug effects, Growth Differentiation Factor 3 metabolism, Obesity drug therapy, PPAR gamma metabolism, Thiazolidinediones pharmacology
- Abstract
The thiazolidinediones (TZDs) are ligands of PPARγ that improve insulin sensitivity, but their use is limited by significant side effects. Recently, we demonstrated a mechanism wherein TZDs improve insulin sensitivity distinct from receptor agonism and adipogenesis: reversal of obesity-linked phosphorylation of PPARγ at serine 273. However, the role of this modification hasn't been tested genetically. Here we demonstrate that mice encoding an allele of PPARγ that cannot be phosphorylated at S273 are protected from insulin resistance, without exhibiting differences in body weight or TZD-associated side effects. Indeed, hyperinsulinemic-euglycemic clamp experiments confirm insulin sensitivity. RNA-seq in these mice reveals reduced expression of Gdf3, a BMP family member. Ectopic expression of Gdf3 is sufficient to induce insulin resistance in lean, healthy mice. We find Gdf3 inhibits BMP signaling and insulin signaling in vitro. Together, these results highlight the diabetogenic role of PPARγ S273 phosphorylation and focus attention on a putative target, Gdf3., Competing Interests: Declaration of Interests E.D.R. is a paid consultant of Novartis. B.B.K. consults for Alterna and serves on the Scientific Advisory Board of Janssen Pharmaceuticals. A.S.B. and B.M.S. hold a patent related to this work., (Copyright © 2020 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2020
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4. Molecular diversification of regulatory T cells in nonlymphoid tissues.
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DiSpirito JR, Zemmour D, Ramanan D, Cho J, Zilionis R, Klein AM, Benoist C, and Mathis D
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- Animals, Forkhead Transcription Factors immunology, Gene Expression Profiling, Male, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Single-Cell Analysis, Colon immunology, Intra-Abdominal Fat immunology, Muscle, Skeletal immunology, T-Lymphocytes, Regulatory immunology
- Abstract
Foxp3
+ CD4+ regulatory T cells (Tregs ) accumulate in certain nonlymphoid tissues, where they control diverse aspects of organ homeostasis. Populations of tissue Tregs , as they have been termed, have transcriptomes distinct from those of their counterparts in lymphoid organs and other nonlymphoid tissues. We examined the diversification of Tregs in visceral adipose tissue, skeletal muscle, and the colon vis-à-vis lymphoid organs from the same individuals. The unique transcriptomes of the various tissue Treg populations resulted from layering of tissue-restricted open chromatin regions over regions already open in the spleen, the latter tagged by super-enhancers and particular histone marks. The binding motifs for a small number of transcription factor (TF) families were repeatedly enriched within the accessible chromatin stretches of Tregs in the three nonlymphoid tissues. However, a bioinformatically and experimentally validated transcriptional network, constructed by integrating chromatin accessibility and single-cell transcriptomic data, predicted reliance on different TF family members in the different tissues. The network analysis also revealed that tissue-restricted and broadly acting TFs were integrated into feed-forward loops to enforce tissue-specific gene expression in nonlymphoid-tissue Tregs . Overall, this study provides a framework for understanding the epigenetic dynamics of T cells operating in nonlymphoid tissues, which should inform strategies for specifically targeting them., (Copyright © 2018 The Authors, some rights reserved; exclusive licensee American Association for the Advancement of Science. No claim to original U.S. Government Works.)- Published
- 2018
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5. PPARγ is a nexus controlling alternative activation of macrophages via glutamine metabolism.
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Nelson VL, Nguyen HCB, Garcìa-Cañaveras JC, Briggs ER, Ho WY, DiSpirito JR, Marinis JM, Hill DA, and Lazar MA
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- Animals, Cell Respiration, Cells, Cultured, Fatty Acids metabolism, Gene Expression drug effects, Glucose metabolism, Interleukin-4 physiology, Macrophages drug effects, Macrophages immunology, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Mice, Knockout, PPAR gamma genetics, Rosiglitazone, Thiazolidinediones pharmacology, Glutamine metabolism, Macrophage Activation, Macrophages metabolism, PPAR gamma physiology
- Abstract
The nuclear receptor peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor γ (PPARγ) is known to regulate lipid metabolism in many tissues, including macrophages. Here we report that peritoneal macrophage respiration is enhanced by rosiglitazone, an activating PPARγ ligand, in a PPARγ-dependent manner. Moreover, PPARγ is required for macrophage respiration even in the absence of exogenous ligand. Unexpectedly, the absence of PPARγ dramatically affects the oxidation of glutamine. Both glutamine and PPARγ have been implicated in alternative activation (AA) of macrophages, and PPARγ was required for interleukin 4 (IL4)-dependent gene expression and stimulation of macrophage respiration. Indeed, unstimulated macrophages lacking PPARγ contained elevated levels of the inflammation-associated metabolite itaconate and express a proinflammatory transcriptome that, remarkably, phenocopied that of macrophages depleted of glutamine. Thus, PPARγ functions as a checkpoint, guarding against inflammation, and is permissive for AA by facilitating glutamine metabolism. However, PPARγ expression is itself markedly increased by IL4. This suggests that PPARγ functions at the center of a feed-forward loop that is central to AA of macrophages., (© 2018 Nelson et al.; Published by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press.)
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- 2018
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6. TCR Transgenic Mice Reveal Stepwise, Multi-site Acquisition of the Distinctive Fat-Treg Phenotype.
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Li C, DiSpirito JR, Zemmour D, Spallanzani RG, Kuswanto W, Benoist C, and Mathis D
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- Animals, Chromatin Assembly and Disassembly, Forkhead Transcription Factors metabolism, Interleukin-1 Receptor-Like 1 Protein genetics, Interleukin-1 Receptor-Like 1 Protein metabolism, Intra-Abdominal Fat immunology, Macrophages cytology, Macrophages immunology, Macrophages metabolism, Male, Mice, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Mice, Transgenic, PPAR gamma genetics, PPAR gamma metabolism, Phenotype, RNA chemistry, RNA isolation & purification, RNA metabolism, Receptors, Antigen, T-Cell metabolism, Receptors, Interleukin metabolism, Single-Cell Analysis, Spleen immunology, Spleen metabolism, T-Lymphocytes, Regulatory cytology, T-Lymphocytes, Regulatory immunology, Transcriptome, Intra-Abdominal Fat metabolism, Receptors, Antigen, T-Cell genetics, T-Lymphocytes, Regulatory metabolism
- Abstract
Visceral adipose tissue (VAT) hosts a population of regulatory T (Treg) cells, with a unique phenotype, that controls local and systemic inflammation and metabolism. Generation of a T cell receptor transgenic mouse line, wherein VAT Tregs are highly enriched, facilitated study of their provenance, dependencies, and activities. We definitively established a role for T cell receptor specificity, uncovered an unexpected function for the primordial Treg transcription-factor, Foxp3, evidenced a cell-intrinsic role for interleukin-33 receptor, and ordered these dependencies within a coherent scenario. Genesis of the VAT-Treg phenotype entailed a priming step in the spleen, permitting them to exit the lymphoid organs and surveil nonlymphoid tissues, and a final diversification process within VAT, in response to microenvironmental cues. Understanding the principles of tissue-Treg biology is a prerequisite for precision-targeting strategies., (Copyright © 2018 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2018
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7. Targeting PPARγ in the epigenome rescues genetic metabolic defects in mice.
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Soccio RE, Li Z, Chen ER, Foong YH, Benson KK, Dispirito JR, Mullican SE, Emmett MJ, Briggs ER, Peed LC, Dzeng RK, Medina CJ, Jolivert JF, Kissig M, Rajapurkar SR, Damle M, Lim HW, Won KJ, Seale P, Steger DJ, and Lazar MA
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- Animals, Diet, High-Fat adverse effects, Hypoglycemic Agents pharmacology, Intra-Abdominal Fat metabolism, Male, Mice, 129 Strain, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Protein Binding, Regulatory Elements, Transcriptional, Rosiglitazone, Subcutaneous Fat, Abdominal metabolism, Thiazolidinediones pharmacology, Transcriptional Activation, Transcriptome, Uncoupling Protein 1 genetics, Uncoupling Protein 1 metabolism, Epigenesis, Genetic, Obesity metabolism, PPAR gamma physiology
- Abstract
Obesity causes insulin resistance, and PPARγ ligands such as rosiglitazone are insulin sensitizing, yet the mechanisms remain unclear. In C57BL/6 (B6) mice, obesity induced by a high-fat diet (HFD) has major effects on visceral epididymal adipose tissue (eWAT). Here, we report that HFD-induced obesity in B6 mice also altered the activity of gene regulatory elements and genome-wide occupancy of PPARγ. Rosiglitazone treatment restored insulin sensitivity in obese B6 mice, yet, surprisingly, had little effect on gene expression in eWAT. However, in subcutaneous inguinal fat (iWAT), rosiglitazone markedly induced molecular signatures of brown fat, including the key thermogenic gene Ucp1. Obesity-resistant 129S1/SvImJ mice (129 mice) displayed iWAT browning, even in the absence of rosiglitazone. The 129 Ucp1 locus had increased PPARγ binding and gene expression that were preserved in the iWAT of B6x129 F1-intercrossed mice, with an imbalance favoring the 129-derived alleles, demonstrating a cis-acting genetic difference. Thus, B6 mice have genetically defective Ucp1 expression in iWAT. However, when Ucp1 was activated by rosiglitazone, or by iWAT browning in cold-exposed or young mice, expression of the B6 version of Ucp1 was no longer defective relative to the 129 version, indicating epigenomic rescue. These results provide a framework for understanding how environmental influences like drugs can affect the epigenome and potentially rescue genetically determined disease phenotypes.
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- 2017
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8. Transcriptome Signatures Reveal Rapid Induction of Immune-Responsive Genes in Human Memory CD8(+) T Cells.
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Yang C, Khanniche A, DiSpirito JR, Ji P, Wang S, Wang Y, and Shen H
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- Amino Acids immunology, Amino Acids metabolism, CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes cytology, CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes immunology, Cell Differentiation, Chemotaxis genetics, Chemotaxis immunology, Cytokines immunology, Cytokines metabolism, Gene Expression Profiling, Humans, Lymphocyte Activation, Microarray Analysis, Molecular Sequence Annotation, Nitrogen immunology, Nitrogen metabolism, Nucleosides immunology, Nucleosides metabolism, Primary Cell Culture, CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes metabolism, Gene Expression Regulation immunology, Genome, Human immunology, Immunologic Memory genetics, Transcriptome
- Abstract
Memory T cells (TM) play a prominent role in protection and auto-immunity due to their ability to mount a more effective response than naïve T cells (TN). However, the molecular mechanisms underlying enhanced functionality of TM are not well defined, particularly in human TM. We examined the global gene expression profiles of human CD8(+) TN and TM before and after stimulation. There were 1,284, 1,373 and 1,629 differentially expressed genes between TN and TM at 0 hr, 4 hr and 24 hr after stimulation, respectively, with more genes expressed to higher levels in TM. Genes rapidly up-regulated in TN cells were largely involved in nitrogen, nucleoside and amino acid metabolisms. In contrast, those in CD8(+) TM were significantly enriched for immune-response-associated processes, including cytokine production, lymphocyte activation and chemotaxis. Multiple cytokines were rapidly up-regulated in TM cells, including effector cytokines known to be produced by CD8(+) T cells and important for their functions, as well as regulatory cytokines, both pro- and anti-inflammatory, that are not typically produced by CD8(+) T cells. These results provide new insights into molecular mechanisms that contribute to the enhanced functionality of human CD8(+) TM and their prominent role in protection and auto-immunity.
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- 2016
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9. Immunological contributions to adipose tissue homeostasis.
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DiSpirito JR and Mathis D
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- Adipocytes metabolism, Adipose Tissue pathology, Animals, Cell Communication, Diet, Elasticity, Energy Metabolism, Gastrointestinal Microbiome immunology, Humans, Immune System cytology, Immune System immunology, Immune System metabolism, Inflammation etiology, Inflammation metabolism, Inflammation pathology, Obesity complications, Obesity immunology, Obesity metabolism, Signal Transduction, Adipose Tissue immunology, Adipose Tissue metabolism, Homeostasis, Immunity
- Abstract
Adipose tissue is composed of many functionally and developmentally distinct cell types, the metabolic core of which is the adipocyte. The classification of "adipocyte" encompasses three primary types - white, brown, and beige - with distinct origins, anatomic distributions, and homeostatic functions. The ability of adipocytes to store and release lipids, respond to insulin, and perform their endocrine functions (via secretion of adipokines) is heavily influenced by the immune system. Various cell populations of the innate and adaptive arms of the immune system can resist or exacerbate the development of the chronic, low-grade inflammation associated with obesity and metabolic dysfunction. Here, we discuss these interactions, with a focus on their consequences for adipocyte and adipose tissue function in the setting of chronic overnutrition. In addition, we will review the effects of diet composition on adipose tissue inflammation and recent evidence suggesting that diet-driven disruption of the gut microbiota can trigger pathologic inflammation of adipose tissue., (Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2015
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10. Genetic Variation Determines PPARγ Function and Anti-diabetic Drug Response In Vivo.
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Soccio RE, Chen ER, Rajapurkar SR, Safabakhsh P, Marinis JM, Dispirito JR, Emmett MJ, Briggs ER, Fang B, Everett LJ, Lim HW, Won KJ, Steger DJ, Wu Y, Civelek M, Voight BF, and Lazar MA
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- Adipose Tissue, Animals, Gene Expression, Humans, Mice, Mice, 129 Strain, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Transcription Factors metabolism, Hypoglycemic Agents metabolism, PPAR gamma genetics, PPAR gamma metabolism, Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide
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SNPs affecting disease risk often reside in non-coding genomic regions. Here, we show that SNPs are highly enriched at mouse strain-selective adipose tissue binding sites for PPARγ, a nuclear receptor for anti-diabetic drugs. Many such SNPs alter binding motifs for PPARγ or cooperating factors and functionally regulate nearby genes whose expression is strain selective and imbalanced in heterozygous F1 mice. Moreover, genetically determined binding of PPARγ accounts for mouse strain-specific transcriptional effects of TZD drugs, providing proof of concept for personalized medicine related to nuclear receptor genomic occupancy. In human fat, motif-altering SNPs cause differential PPARγ binding, provide a molecular mechanism for some expression quantitative trait loci, and are risk factors for dysmetabolic traits in genome-wide association studies. One PPARγ motif-altering SNP is associated with HDL levels and other metabolic syndrome parameters. Thus, natural genetic variation in PPARγ genomic occupancy determines individual disease risk and drug response., (Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2015
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11. Epigenetic manipulation restores functions of defective CD8⁺ T cells from chronic viral infection.
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Zhang F, Zhou X, DiSpirito JR, Wang C, Wang Y, and Shen H
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- Adoptive Transfer, Animals, Arenaviridae Infections virology, CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes virology, Chromatin Assembly and Disassembly, Enzyme Inhibitors pharmacology, Female, Histones metabolism, Lymphocytic Choriomeningitis immunology, Lymphocytic Choriomeningitis virology, Mice, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Arenaviridae Infections immunology, CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes metabolism, Epigenesis, Genetic, Lymphocytic Choriomeningitis veterinary, Lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus physiology
- Abstract
Functional exhaustion of antigen-specific T cells is a defining characteristic of many chronic infections, but the underlying mechanisms of T cell dysfunction are not well understood. Epigenetics plays an important role in the control of T cell development, differentiation, and function. To examine if epigenetics also plays a role in T cell exhaustion, we analyzed chromatin remodeling in CD8(+) T cells from mice with chronic lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus infection. We observed downregulation of diacetylated histone H3 in both virus-specific and total CD8(+) T cells, and functional defects not only in virus-specific CD8(+) T cells but also within the total CD8(+) T cell population. In vitro treatment of these exhausted CD8(+) T cells with histone deacetylase inhibitors restored diacetylated histone H3 levels, and improved their immune functions. Upon adoptive transfer, these treated CD8(+) T cells developed into functional memory T cells in vivo that enhanced protective immunity. These results define a role of epigenetics in T cell exhaustion and suggest epigenetic manipulation as a novel molecular therapy to restore immune functions.
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- 2014
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12. The orphan nuclear receptors at their 25-year reunion.
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Mullican SE, Dispirito JR, and Lazar MA
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- Animals, Humans, Orphan Nuclear Receptors metabolism, Transcription Factors metabolism
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The nuclear receptor superfamily includes many receptors, identified based on their similarity to steroid hormone receptors but without a known ligand. The study of how these receptors are diversely regulated to interact with genomic regions to control a plethora of biological processes has provided critical insight into development, physiology, and the molecular pathology of disease. Here we provide a compendium of these so-called orphan receptors and focus on what has been learned about their modes of action, physiological functions, and therapeutic promise.
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- 2013
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13. Lipoatrophy and severe metabolic disturbance in mice with fat-specific deletion of PPARγ.
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Wang F, Mullican SE, DiSpirito JR, Peed LC, and Lazar MA
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- Animals, Azo Compounds, Immunoblotting, Immunohistochemistry, Insulin Resistance physiology, Mice, PPAR gamma genetics, Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction, X-Ray Microtomography, Adipocytes metabolism, Insulin Resistance genetics, Obesity metabolism, PPAR gamma deficiency
- Abstract
Adipose tissue is an important metabolic organ, the dysfunction of which is associated with the development of obesity, diabetes mellitus, and cardiovascular disease. The nuclear receptor peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma (PPARγ) is considered the master regulator of adipocyte differentiation and function. Although its cell-autonomous role in adipogenesis has been clearly demonstrated in cell culture, previous fat-specific knockouts of the murine PPARγ gene did not demonstrate a dramatic phenotype in vivo. Here, using Adipoq-Cre mice to drive adipose-specific recombination, we report a unique fat-specific PPARγ knockout (PPARγ FKO) mouse model with almost no visible brown and white adipose tissue at age 3 mo. As a consequence, PPARγ FKO mice had hugely enlarged pancreatic islets, massive fatty livers, and dramatically elevated levels of blood glucose and serum insulin accompanied by extreme insulin resistance. PPARγ FKO mice also exhibited delayed hair coat formation associated with absence of dermal fat, disrupted mammary gland development with loss of mammary fat pads, and high bone mass with loss of bone marrow fat, indicating the critical roles of adipose PPARγ in these tissues. Together, our data reveal the necessity of fat PPARγ in adipose formation, whole-body metabolic homeostasis, and normal development of fat-containing tissues.
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- 2013
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14. Pruning of the adipocyte peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor γ cistrome by hematopoietic master regulator PU.1.
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Dispirito JR, Fang B, Wang F, and Lazar MA
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- 3T3-L1 Cells, Adipocytes cytology, Adipogenesis, Adipose Tissue, White metabolism, Animals, Gene Expression, Macrophages cytology, Male, Mice, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Protein Binding, Proto-Oncogene Proteins genetics, Trans-Activators genetics, Adipocytes metabolism, Gene Expression Regulation, Macrophages metabolism, PPAR gamma metabolism, Proto-Oncogene Proteins metabolism, Trans-Activators metabolism
- Abstract
"Master" transcription factors are the gatekeepers of lineage identity. As such, they have been a major focus of efforts to manipulate cell fate for therapeutic purposes. The ETS transcription factor PU.1 has a potent ability to confer macrophage phenotypes on cells already committed to a different lineage, but how it overcomes the presence of other master regulators is not known. The nuclear receptor peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor γ (PPARγ) is the master regulator of the adipose lineage, and its genomic binding pattern in adipocytes is well characterized. Here we show that, when expressed at macrophage levels in mature adipocytes, PU.1 bound a large fraction of its macrophage sites, where it induced chromatin opening and the expression of macrophage target genes. Strikingly, PU.1 markedly reduced the genomic binding of PPARγ without changing its abundance. PU.1 expression repressed genes with nearby adipocyte-specific PPARγ binding sites, while a common macrophage-adipocyte gene expression program was retained. Together, these data reveal unexpected lability within the adipocyte PPARγ cistrome and show that, even in terminally differentiated cells, PU.1 can remodel the cistrome of another master regulator.
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- 2013
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15. Histone acetylation at the single-cell level: a marker of memory CD8+ T cell differentiation and functionality.
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Dispirito JR and Shen H
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- Acetylation, Animals, Biomarkers metabolism, CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes microbiology, CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes virology, Cell Differentiation genetics, Cells, Cultured, Female, Flow Cytometry methods, Immunophenotyping, Listeria monocytogenes immunology, Lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus immunology, Mice, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Mice, Knockout, Mice, Transgenic, Protein Processing, Post-Translational immunology, T-Lymphocyte Subsets immunology, T-Lymphocyte Subsets microbiology, T-Lymphocyte Subsets virology, T-Lymphocytes, Cytotoxic immunology, T-Lymphocytes, Cytotoxic metabolism, T-Lymphocytes, Cytotoxic microbiology, T-Lymphocytes, Cytotoxic virology, CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes immunology, CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes metabolism, Cell Differentiation immunology, Histones metabolism, Immunologic Memory genetics, T-Lymphocyte Subsets metabolism
- Abstract
Following stimulation, memory T (T(M)) cells rapidly express many effector functions, a hallmark feature that allows them to provide protective immunity. Recent studies suggest that genes involved in this rapid recall response may maintain an open chromatin structure in resting T(M) cells via epigenetic modifications. However, these studies have mostly focused on a few loci, and the techniques used required a large number of cells. We have developed a flow cytometric assay measuring histone modifications in individual murine T cells in combination with lineage-specific markers. In this study, we show that the per-cell level of a marker of open chromatin, diacetylated histone H3 (diAcH3), increases as naive CD8(+) T cells develop into T(M) cells, demonstrating a novel correlation between the differentiation state of a CD8(+) T cell and its abundance of a specific histone modification. Furthermore, our results show that T(M) cells defective in rapid recall ability have less diAcH3 than their fully functional counterparts, indicating that the diAcH3 level of individual T(M) cells is a useful marker for assessing their functionality.
- Published
- 2010
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16. Quick to remember, slow to forget: rapid recall responses of memory CD8+ T cells.
- Author
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DiSpirito JR and Shen H
- Subjects
- Adaptive Immunity genetics, Animals, Cell Differentiation genetics, Cell Differentiation immunology, Cell Lineage genetics, Cell Lineage immunology, Chemokines biosynthesis, Chemokines genetics, Cytokines biosynthesis, Cytokines genetics, Humans, Immunologic Memory genetics, Lymphocyte Activation genetics, Reaction Time genetics, Reaction Time immunology, Transcriptional Activation genetics, Adaptive Immunity immunology, CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes immunology, Immunologic Memory immunology, Lymphocyte Activation immunology
- Abstract
The functional roles of memory B and T lymphocytes underlie the phenomenal success of prophylactic vaccinations, which have decreased morbidities and mortalities from infectious diseases globally over the last 50 years. However, it is becoming increasingly appreciated that memory cells are also capable of mediating the pathology associated with autoimmune disorders and transplant rejection, and may pose a significant barrier to future clinical advancement in immunoregulation. Therefore, understanding the unique properties of memory lymphocytes (as compared to their naive precursors) is a major area of investigation. Here, we focus on one of those singular properties of memory T cells (T(M))-rapid recall. As will be discussed in more detail, rapid recall refers to the ability of quiescent T(M) cells to efficiently and robustly express 'effector functions' following stimulation. Studies that have advanced our understanding of T(M) cells' rapid recall using CD4(+) T cells have been expertly reviewed elsewhere, so we will focus primarily on studies of CD8(+) T cells. We will first review the different ways that CD8(+) T(M) cells can be generated, followed by discussing how this influences their functional properties in the settings of immune protection and pathology. Then, rapid recall ability will be discussed, with emphasis placed on what is currently known about the mechanisms that underlie this unique property of T(M) cells.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
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