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TET2 regulates immune tolerance in chronically activated mast cells
Riccardo Rigo, Rabie Chelbi, Julie Agopian, Sebastien Letard, Aurélien Griffon, Hussein Ghamlouch, Julien Vernerey, Vasileios Ladopoulos, Edwige Voisset, Paulo De Sepulveda, Geoffrey Guittard, Jacques A. Nunès, Ghislain Bidaut, Berthold Göttgens, Michael Weber, Olivier A. Bernard, Patrice Dubreuil, Erinn Soucie
Riccardo Rigo, Rabie Chelbi, Julie Agopian, Sebastien Letard, Aurélien Griffon, Hussein Ghamlouch, Julien Vernerey, Vasileios Ladopoulos, Edwige Voisset, Paulo De Sepulveda, Geoffrey Guittard, Jacques A. Nunès, Ghislain Bidaut, Berthold Göttgens, Michael Weber, Olivier A. Bernard, Patrice Dubreuil, Erinn Soucie
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Research Article Inflammation

TET2 regulates immune tolerance in chronically activated mast cells

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Abstract

Mutation of the TET2 DNA-hydroxymethylase has been associated with a number of immune pathologies. The disparity in phenotype and clinical presentation among these pathologies leads to questions regarding the role of TET2 mutation in promoting disease evolution in different immune cell types. Here we show that, in primary mast cells, Tet2 expression is induced in response to chronic and acute activation signals. In TET2-deficient mast cells, chronic activation via the oncogenic KITD816V allele associated with mastocytosis, selects for a specific epigenetic signature characterized by hypermethylated DNA regions (HMR) at immune response genes. H3K27ac and transcription factor binding is consistent with priming or more open chromatin at both HMR and non-HMR in proximity to immune genes in these cells, and this signature coincides with increased pathological inflammation signals. HMR are also associated with a subset of immune genes that are direct targets of TET2 and repressed in TET2-deficient cells. Repression of these genes results in immune tolerance to acute stimulation that can be rescued with vitamin C treatment or reiterated with a Tet inhibitor. Overall, our data support a model where TET2 plays a direct role in preventing immune tolerance in chronically activated mast cells, supporting TET2 as a viable target to reprogram the innate immune response for innovative therapies.

Authors

Riccardo Rigo, Rabie Chelbi, Julie Agopian, Sebastien Letard, Aurélien Griffon, Hussein Ghamlouch, Julien Vernerey, Vasileios Ladopoulos, Edwige Voisset, Paulo De Sepulveda, Geoffrey Guittard, Jacques A. Nunès, Ghislain Bidaut, Berthold Göttgens, Michael Weber, Olivier A. Bernard, Patrice Dubreuil, Erinn Soucie

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Figure 5

Tet2–/–KITD816V mast cells are chronically activated to a greater extent than Tet2+/+KITD816V.

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Tet2–/–KITD816V mast cells are chronically activated to a greater exten...
(A) Schematic showing chronic mast cell activation assay. (B) Quantification of mean fluorescent intensity (MFI) of Cell Trace reagent (CFSE), gated on live BM cells after 6 days of culture in conditioned media derived from either Tet2+/+KITD816V or Tet2–/–KITD816V mast cell cultures. P value for paired, 2-tailed t test is shown. (C) FACS analysis of BM at 3 days culture in conditioned media derived from either Tet2+/+KITD816V or Tet2–/–KITD816V mast cell cultures. Panels show representative profiles gated on live, single-cell, CD11b+ lymphocyte populations. (D) Graphs show quantification of C for a total of 8 paired analyses: n = 4 different starting BM preparations cultured with either Tet2+/+KITD816V or Tet2–/–KITD816V mast cell conditioned media, n = 2 each. Results shown were reproduced 3 times in independent experiments. P values for paired, 2-tailed t test are associated to each plot. (E) Quantification of immune genes by qPCR, relative to Hprt1, in total BM cultured with mast cell conditioned media for 24 hours. Each square shows mean expression for n = 4. Linear regression with 95% CI is shown. Slope is 0.81 ± 0.045 and shows a significant deviation from zero; P < 0.0001.

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