1. Histone deacetylase 3 represses cholesterol efflux during CD4 + T-cell activation.
- Author
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Wilfahrt D, Philips RL, Lama J, Kizerwetter M, Shapiro MJ, McCue SA, Kennedy MM, Rajcula MJ, Zeng H, and Shapiro VS
- Subjects
- ATP Binding Cassette Transporter 1 metabolism, ATP Binding Cassette Transporter, Subfamily G, Member 1 metabolism, Animals, Cholesterol genetics, Female, Histone Deacetylases genetics, Male, Mice, Mice, Mutant Strains, CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes metabolism, Cholesterol metabolism, Histone Deacetylases metabolism
- Abstract
After antigenic activation, quiescent naive CD4
+ T cells alter their metabolism to proliferate. This metabolic shift increases production of nucleotides, amino acids, fatty acids, and sterols. Here, we show that histone deacetylase 3 (HDAC3) is critical for activation of murine peripheral CD4+ T cells. HDAC3-deficient CD4+ T cells failed to proliferate and blast after in vitro TCR/CD28 stimulation. Upon T-cell activation, genes involved in cholesterol biosynthesis are upregulated while genes that promote cholesterol efflux are repressed. HDAC3-deficient CD4+ T cells had reduced levels of cellular cholesterol both before and after activation. HDAC3-deficient cells upregulate cholesterol synthesis appropriately after activation, but fail to repress cholesterol efflux; notably, they overexpress cholesterol efflux transporters ABCA1 and ABCG1. Repression of these genes is the primary function for HDAC3 in peripheral CD4+ T cells, as addition of exogenous cholesterol restored proliferative capacity. Collectively, these findings demonstrate HDAC3 is essential during CD4+ T-cell activation to repress cholesterol efflux., Competing Interests: DW, RP, JL, MK, MS, SM, MK, MR, HZ, VS No competing interests declared, (© 2021, Wilfahrt et al.)- Published
- 2021
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