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Epitranscriptomics & Cancer Adaptation : A.David

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Our research work focuses on the contribution of post-transcriptional mechanisms on cancer cell adaptation, in particular RNA epigenetic & translational control.

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Group name EQUIPEFC
Item Type Journal Article
Title Critical role for TRIM28 and HP1?/? in the epigenetic control of T cell metabolic reprograming and effector differentiation
Creator Gehrmann et al.
Author Ulf Gehrmann
Author Marianne Burbage
Author Elina Zueva
Author Christel Goudot
Author Cyril Esnault
Author Mengliang Ye
Author Jean-Marie Carpier
Author Nina Burgdorf
Author Thomas Hoyler
Author Guadalupe Suarez
Author Leonel Joannas
Author Sandrine Heurtebise-Chrétien
Author Sylvère Durand
Author Rébecca Panes
Author Angélique Bellemare-Pelletier
Author Pablo J. Sáez
Author Fanny Aprahamian
Author Deborah Lefevre
Author Veronique Adoue
Author Amal Zine El Aabidine
Author Maqbool Muhammad Ahmad
Author Claire Hivroz
Author Olivier Joffre
Author Florence Cammas
Author Guido Kroemer
Author Etienne Gagnon
Author Jean-Christophe Andrau
Author Sebastian Amigorena
Abstract Naive CD4+ T lymphocytes differentiate into different effector types, including helper and regulatory cells (Th and Treg, respectively). Heritable gene expression programs that define these effector types are established during differentiation, but little is known about the epigenetic mechanisms that install and maintain these programs. Here, we use mice defective for different components of heterochromatin-dependent gene silencing to investigate the epigenetic control of CD4+ T cell plasticity. We show that, upon T cell receptor (TCR) engagement, naive and regulatory T cells defective for TRIM28 (an epigenetic adaptor for histone binding modules) or for heterochromatin protein 1 ? and ? isoforms (HP1?/?, 2 histone-binding factors involved in gene silencing) fail to effectively signal through the PI3K-AKT-mTOR axis and switch to glycolysis. While differentiation of naive TRIM28-/- T cells into cytokine-producing effector T cells is impaired, resulting in reduced induction of autoimmune colitis, TRIM28-/- regulatory T cells also fail to expand in vivo and to suppress autoimmunity effectively. Using a combination of transcriptome and chromatin immunoprecipitation-sequencing (ChIP-seq) analyses for H3K9me3, H3K9Ac, and RNA polymerase II, we show that reduced effector differentiation correlates with impaired transcriptional silencing at distal regulatory regions of a defined set of Treg-associated genes, including, for example, NRP1 or Snai3. We conclude that TRIM28 and HP1?/? control metabolic reprograming through epigenetic silencing of a defined set of Treg-characteristic genes, thus allowing effective T cell expansion and differentiation into helper and regulatory phenotypes.
Publication Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Volume 116
Issue 51
Pages 25839-25849
Date Dec 17, 2019
Journal Abbr Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A.
Language eng
DOI 10.1073/pnas.1901639116
ISSN 1091-6490
Library Catalog PubMed
Extra PMID: 31776254
Tags autoimmunity, epigenetics, immunology, T cells, top, TRIM28
Date Added 2019/12/19 - 09:42:42
Date Modified 2019/12/19 - 09:43:14
Notes and Attachments PubMed entry (Attachment)


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