학술논문

Bromodomain protein BRD4 directs and sustains CD8 T cell differentiation during infection
Document Type
article
Source
Journal of Experimental Medicine. 218(8)
Subject
Genetics
Infectious Diseases
Emerging Infectious Diseases
Vaccine Related
Aetiology
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Animals
CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes
Cell Differentiation
Chromatin
Enhancer Elements
Genetic
Mice
Knockout
Neoplasms
Nuclear Proteins
Protein Binding
RNA Interference
Transcription Factors
Transcription
Genetic
Virus Diseases
Medical and Health Sciences
Immunology
Language
Abstract
In response to infection, pathogen-specific CD8 T cells differentiate into functionally diverse effector and memory T cell populations critical for resolving disease and providing durable immunity. Through small-molecule inhibition, RNAi studies, and induced genetic deletion, we reveal an essential role for the chromatin modifier and BET family member BRD4 in supporting the differentiation and maintenance of terminally fated effector CD8 T cells during infection. BRD4 bound diverse regulatory regions critical to effector T cell differentiation and controlled transcriptional activity of terminal effector-specific super-enhancers in vivo. Consequentially, induced deletion of Brd4 or small molecule-mediated BET inhibition impaired maintenance of a terminal effector T cell phenotype. BRD4 was also required for terminal differentiation of CD8 T cells in the tumor microenvironment in murine models, which we show has implications for immunotherapies. Taken together, these data reveal an unappreciated requirement for BRD4 in coordinating activity of cis regulatory elements to control CD8 T cell fate and lineage stability.