Cell Reports (Dec 2017)

Regulation of H3K4me3 at Transcriptional Enhancers Characterizes Acquisition of Virus-Specific CD8+ T Cell-Lineage-Specific Function

  • Brendan E. Russ,
  • Moshe Olshansky,
  • Jasmine Li,
  • Michelle L.T. Nguyen,
  • Linden J. Gearing,
  • Thi H.O. Nguyen,
  • Matthew R. Olson,
  • Hayley A. McQuilton,
  • Simone Nüssing,
  • Georges Khoury,
  • Damian F.J. Purcell,
  • Paul J. Hertzog,
  • Sudha Rao,
  • Stephen J. Turner

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 21, no. 12
pp. 3624 – 3636

Abstract

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Summary: Infection triggers large-scale changes in the phenotype and function of T cells that are critical for immune clearance, yet the gene regulatory mechanisms that control these changes are largely unknown. Using ChIP-seq for specific histone post-translational modifications (PTMs), we mapped the dynamics of ∼25,000 putative CD8+ T cell transcriptional enhancers (TEs) differentially utilized during virus-specific T cell differentiation. Interestingly, we identified a subset of dynamically regulated TEs that exhibited acquisition of a non-canonical (H3K4me3+) chromatin signature upon differentiation. This unique TE subset exhibited characteristics of poised enhancers in the naive CD8+ T cell subset and demonstrated enrichment for transcription factor binding motifs known to be important for virus-specific CD8+ T cell differentiation. These data provide insights into the establishment and maintenance of the gene transcription profiles that define each stage of virus-specific T cell differentiation. : Russ et al. demonstrate that a subset of poised transcriptional enhancers found in naive virus-specific CD8+ T cells acquire a non-canonical chromatin signature upon differentiation. These data provide the genomic location for T cell lineage-specific transcription factor binding that is necessary for virus-specific T cell differentiation. Keywords: CD8+ T cell, influenza, chromatin, epigenetics, transcription factor