Cell Reports (Nov 2017)

Immunoproteasomes Control the Homeostasis of Medullary Thymic Epithelial Cells by Alleviating Proteotoxic Stress

  • Charles St-Pierre,
  • Erwan Morgand,
  • Mohamed Benhammadi,
  • Alexandre Rouette,
  • Marie-Pierre Hardy,
  • Louis Gaboury,
  • Claude Perreault

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.celrep.2017.10.121
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 21, no. 9
pp. 2558 – 2570

Abstract

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The sole nonredundant role of the thymic medulla is to induce central tolerance, a vital process that depends on promiscuous gene expression (pGE), a unique feature of medullary thymic epithelial cells (mTECs). Although pGE enhances transcription of >3,000 genes in mTECs, its impact on the regulation of protein homeostasis remains unexplored. Here, we report that, because of pGE, mature mTECs synthesize substantially more proteins than other cell types and are exquisitely sensitive to loss of immunoproteasomes (IPs). Indeed, IP deficiency causes proteotoxic stress in mTECs and leads to exhaustion of postnatal mTEC progenitors. Moreover, IP-deficient mice show accelerated thymic involution, which is characterized by a selective loss of mTECs and multiorgan autoimmune manifestations. We conclude that pGE, the quintessential feature of mTECs, is a major burden for the maintenance of proteostasis, which is alleviated by the constitutive expression of IPs in mTECs.

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