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Discovery of stimulation-responsive immune enhancers with CRISPR activation

Authors :
Ansuman T. Satpathy
K. Mark Ansel
Nicolas Bray
Jeffrey A. Bluestone
Alice Y. Chan
Graham J. Ray
Dimitre R. Simeonov
Kyle Kai-How Farh
Theodore L. Roth
Zhongmei Li
Michelle L.T. Nguyen
Mark J. Daly
William J. Greenleaf
Kathrin Schumann
Gemma L. Curie
Mark S. Anderson
Ruize Liu
Chun Jimmie Ye
Howard Y. Chang
Alexander Marson
Dmytro Lituiev
Therese Mitros
Nicki Naddaf
Jacob E. Corn
Victoria Tobin
Meena Subramaniam
Maxwell R. Mumbach
Hailiang Huang
Benjamin G. Gowen
Rachel E. Gate
Julia S. Chu
John D. Gagnon
Hong Ma
Frédéric Van Gool
Youjin Lee
Eric Boyer
Jonathan M. Woo
Mandy Boontanrart
Source :
Nature, vol 549, iss 7670
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
eScholarship, University of California, 2017.

Abstract

The majority of genetic variants associated with common human diseases map to enhancers, non-coding elements that shape cell-type-specific transcriptional programs and responses to extracellular cues. Systematic mapping of functional enhancers and their biological contexts is required to understand the mechanisms by which variation in non-coding genetic sequences contributes to disease. Functional enhancers can be mapped by genomic sequence disruption, but this approach is limited to the subset of enhancers that are necessary in the particular cellular context being studied. We hypothesized that recruitment of a strong transcriptional activator to an enhancer would be sufficient to drive target gene expression, even if that enhancer was not currently active in the assayed cells. Here we describe a discovery platform that can identify stimulus-responsive enhancers for a target gene independent of stimulus exposure. We used tiled CRISPR activation (CRISPRa) to synthetically recruit a transcriptional activator to sites across large genomic regions (more than 100 kilobases) surrounding two key autoimmunity risk loci, CD69 and IL2RA. We identified several CRISPRa-responsive elements with chromatin features of stimulus-responsive enhancers, including an IL2RA enhancer that harbours an autoimmunity risk variant. Using engineered mouse models, we found that sequence perturbation of the disease-associated Il2ra enhancer did not entirely block Il2ra expression, but rather delayed the timing of gene activation in response to specific extracellular signals. Enhancer deletion skewed polarization of naive T cells towards a pro-inflammatory T helper (TH17) cell state and away from a regulatory T cell state. This integrated approach identifies functional enhancers and reveals how non-coding variation associated with human immune dysfunction alters context-specific gene programs.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature, vol 549, iss 7670
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....67bd4330f085a76ad425b15ed30679cd