Nature Communications (Nov 2023)

OVOL2 sustains postnatal thymic epithelial cell identity

  • Xue Zhong,
  • Nagesh Peddada,
  • Jianhui Wang,
  • James J. Moresco,
  • Xiaowei Zhan,
  • John M. Shelton,
  • Jeffrey A. SoRelle,
  • Katie Keller,
  • Danielle Renee Lazaro,
  • Eva Marie Y. Moresco,
  • Jin Huk Choi,
  • Bruce Beutler

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-43456-z
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 22

Abstract

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Abstract Distinct pathways and molecules may support embryonic versus postnatal thymic epithelial cell (TEC) development and maintenance. Here, we identify a mechanism by which TEC numbers and function are maintained postnatally. A viable missense allele (C120Y) of Ovol2, expressed ubiquitously or specifically in TECs, results in lymphopenia, in which T cell development is compromised by loss of medullary TECs and dysfunction of cortical TECs. We show that the epithelial identity of TECs is aberrantly subverted towards a mesenchymal state in OVOL2-deficient mice. We demonstrate that OVOL2 inhibits the epigenetic regulatory BRAF-HDAC complex, specifically disrupting RCOR1-LSD1 interaction. This causes inhibition of LSD1-mediated H3K4me2 demethylation, resulting in chromatin accessibility and transcriptional activation of epithelial genes. Thus, OVOL2 controls the epigenetic landscape of TECs to enforce TEC identity. The identification of a non-redundant postnatal mechanism for TEC maintenance offers an entry point to understanding thymic involution, which normally begins in early adulthood.