Molecular Immunology, Robinson Research Institute, University of Adelaide, Adelaide, SA, Australia.
Women's and Children's Health Network, North Adelaide, SA, Australia.
Front Immunol. 2020 Sep 15;11:1269. doi: 10.3389/fimmu.2020.01269. eCollection 2020.
There has been much interest in the ability of regulatory T cells (Treg) to switch function , either as a result of genetic risk of disease or in response to environmental and metabolic cues. The relationship between levels of FOXP3 and functional fitness plays a significant part in this plasticity. There is an emerging role for Treg in tissue repair that may be less dependent on FOXP3, and the molecular mechanisms underpinning this are not fully understood. As a result of detailed, high-resolution functional genomics, the gene regulatory networks and key functional mediators of Treg phenotype downstream of FOXP3 have been mapped, enabling a mechanistic insight into Treg function. This transcription factor-driven programming of T-cell function to generate Treg requires the switching on and off of key genes that form part of the Treg gene regulatory network and raises the possibility that this is reversible. It is plausible that subtle shifts in expression levels of specific genes, including transcription factors and non-coding RNAs, change the regulation of the Treg gene network. The subtle skewing of gene expression initiates changes in function, with the potential to promote chronic disease and/or to license appropriate inflammatory responses. In the case of autoimmunity, there is an underlying genetic risk, and the interplay of genetic and environmental cues is complex and impacts gene regulation networks frequently involving promoters and enhancers, the regulatory elements that control gene expression levels and responsiveness. These promoter-enhancer interactions can operate over long distances and are highly cell type specific. In autoimmunity, the genetic risk can result in changes in these enhancer/promoter interactions, and this mainly impacts genes which are expressed in T cells and hence impacts Treg/conventional T-cell (Tconv) function. Genetic risk may cause the subtle alterations to the responsiveness of gene regulatory networks which are controlled by or control FOXP3 and its target genes, and the application of assays of the 3D organization of chromatin, enabling the connection of non-coding regulatory regions to the genes they control, is revealing the direct impact of environmental/metabolic/genetic risk on T-cell function and is providing mechanistic insight into susceptibility to inflammatory and autoimmune conditions.
人们对调节性 T 细胞(Treg)的功能转换能力非常感兴趣,这种能力可能是由于疾病的遗传风险,也可能是对环境和代谢线索的反应。FOXP3 水平与功能适应性之间的关系在这种可塑性中起着重要作用。Treg 在组织修复中扮演着新兴的角色,这可能较少依赖于 FOXP3,而其背后的分子机制尚不完全清楚。由于详细的高分辨率功能基因组学,FOXP3 下游 Treg 表型的基因调控网络和关键功能介质已被映射,这使得人们对 Treg 功能有了更深入的了解。这种转录因子驱动的 T 细胞功能编程,以产生 Treg,需要关键基因的开启和关闭,这些基因构成了 Treg 基因调控网络的一部分,并提出了这种编程可能是可逆的可能性。微妙地改变特定基因,包括转录因子和非编码 RNA 的表达水平,可能会改变 Treg 基因网络的调控,这是合理的。基因表达水平的细微变化会引发功能的变化,从而有可能促进慢性疾病的发生和/或批准适当的炎症反应。在自身免疫的情况下,存在潜在的遗传风险,遗传和环境线索的相互作用是复杂的,并且经常影响基因调控网络,包括启动子和增强子,这些调控元件控制基因表达水平和反应性。这些启动子-增强子相互作用可以在长距离上起作用,并且高度细胞类型特异性。在自身免疫中,遗传风险可能导致这些增强子/启动子相互作用的变化,这主要影响在 T 细胞中表达的基因,从而影响 Treg/常规 T 细胞(Tconv)的功能。遗传风险可能导致受 FOXP3 及其靶基因控制或控制 FOXP3 及其靶基因的基因调控网络的反应性发生微妙改变,应用染色质 3D 组织分析的测定方法,使非编码调控区域与它们控制的基因连接,揭示了环境/代谢/遗传风险对 T 细胞功能的直接影响,并为炎症和自身免疫疾病的易感性提供了机制上的见解。