Conditional deletion of histone deacetylase 1 in T cells leads to enhanced airway inflammation and increased Th2 cytokine production

R Grausenburger, I Bilic, N Boucheron… - The Journal of …, 2010 - journals.aai.org
R Grausenburger, I Bilic, N Boucheron, G Zupkovitz, L El-Housseiny, R Tschismarov…
The Journal of Immunology, 2010journals.aai.org
Chromatin modifications, such as reversible histone acetylation, play a key role in the
regulation of T cell development and function. However, the role of individual histone
deacetylases (HDACs) in T cells is less well understood. In this article, we show by
conditional gene targeting that T cell-specific loss of HDAC1 led to an increased
inflammatory response in an in vivo allergic airway inflammation model. Mice with HDAC1-
deficient T cells displayed an increase in all critical parameters in this Th2-type asthma …
Chromatin modifications, such as reversible histone acetylation, play a key role in the regulation of T cell development and function. However, the role of individual histone deacetylases (HDACs) in T cells is less well understood. In this article, we show by conditional gene targeting that T cell-specific loss of HDAC1 led to an increased inflammatory response in an in vivo allergic airway inflammation model. Mice with HDAC1-deficient T cells displayed an increase in all critical parameters in this Th2-type asthma model, such as eosinophil recruitment into the lung, mucus hypersecretion, parenchymal lung inflammation, and enhanced airway resistance. This correlated with enhanced Th2 cytokine production in HDAC1-deficient T cells isolated from diseased mice. In vitro-polarized HDAC1-deficient Th2 cells showed a similar enhancement of IL-4 expression, which was evident already at day 3 of Th2 differentiation cultures and restricted to T cell subsets that underwent several rounds of cell divisions. HDAC1 was recruited to the Il4 gene locus in ex vivo isolated nonstimulated CD4+ T cells, indicating a direct control of the Il4 gene locus. Our data provide genetic evidence that HDAC1 is an essential HDAC that controls the magnitude of an inflammatory response by modulating cytokine expression in effector T cells.
During T cell development and effector differentiation, cell fate decisions are made, and cell lineage-specific gene expression patterns are established and maintained. Epigenetic mechanisms, such as histone and DNA modifications, play a crucial role in this process. For instance, reversible changes in histone acetylation patterns accompany many important processes, ranging from VDJ recombination and CD4/CD8 cell fate decision during T cell development to the induction of cytokine expression during Th1/Th2 effector differentiation (1–5).
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