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452 result(s) for "Koh, Andrew S."
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Rapid chromatin repression by Aire provides precise control of immune tolerance
Aire mediates the expression of tissue-specific antigens in thymic epithelial cells to promote tolerance against self-reactive T lymphocytes. However, the mechanism that allows expression of tissue-specific genes at levels that prevent harm is unknown. Here we show that Brg1 generates accessibility at tissue-specific loci to impose central tolerance. We found that Aire has an intrinsic repressive function that restricts chromatin accessibility and opposes Brg1 across the genome. Aire exerted this repressive influence within minutes after recruitment to chromatin and restrained the amplitude of active transcription. Disease-causing mutations that impair Aire-induced activation also impair the protein’s repressive function, which indicates dual roles for Aire. Together, Brg1 and Aire fine-tune the expression of tissue-specific genes at levels that prevent toxicity yet promote immune tolerance. Crabtree and colleagues show that Aire has an intrinsic repressive function that restricts chromatin accessibility and restrains the amplitude of active transcription.
Aire employs a histone-binding module to mediate immunological tolerance, linking chromatin regulation with organ-specific autoimmunity
Aire induces ectopic expression of peripheral tissue antigens (PTAs) in thymic medullary epithelial cells, which promotes immunological tolerance. Beginning with a broad screen of histone peptides, we demonstrate that the mechanism by which this single factor controls the transcription of thousands of genes involves recognition of the amino-terminal tail of histone H3, but not of other histones, by one of Aire's plant homeodomain (PHD) fingers. Certain posttranslational modifications of H3 tails, notably dimethylation or trimethylation at H3K4, abrogated binding by Aire, whereas others were tolerated. Similar PHD finger-H3 tail-binding properties were recently reported for BRAF-histone deacetylase complex 80 and DNA methyltransferase 3L; sequence alignment, molecular modeling, and biochemical analyses showed these factors and Aire to have structure-function relationships in common. In addition, certain PHD1 mutations underlying the polyendocrine disorder autoimmune polyendocrinopathy-candidiases-ectodermaldystrophy compromised Aire recognition of H3. In vitro binding assays demonstrated direct physical interaction between Aire and nucleosomes, which was in part buttressed by its affinity to DNA. In vivo Aire interactions with chromosomal regions depleted of H3K4me3 were dependent on its H3 tail-binding activity, and this binding was necessary but not sufficient for the up-regulation of genes encoding PTAs. Thus, Aire's activity as a histone-binding module mediates the thymic display of PTAs that promotes self-tolerance and prevents organ-specific autoimmunity.
Global relevance of Aire binding to hypomethylated lysine-4 of histone-3
Aire promotes the ectopic expression of a repertoire of peripheral-tissue antigens (PTAs) in thymic medullary epithelial cells (MECs) to mediate deletional tolerance and thereby prevent autoimmunity. Binding of hypomethylated histone 3 (H3)-tails by Aire's plant homeodomain (PHD) finger is essential for Aire function in cultured cell models, prompting speculation that Aire-PHD:H3-tail interactions underlie targeting of Aire to weakly transcribed loci. To evaluate the role of Aire's PHD finger in MECs on a global scale in vivo, we complemented Aire-deficient mice with a mutant of Aire that inhibits its binding to hypomethylated H3K4 residues. Although the range of Aire-targeted genes was largely unaffected in these mice, the D299A mutation caused a global dampening of Aire's transcriptional impact, resulting in an autoimmune disease similar in profile to that of their Aire-deficient counterparts. To test whether a low H3K4 methylation state is sufficient for Aire targeting, we overexpressed an H3K4-specific demethylase in an Aire-dependent cultured cell system, and determined its capacity to extend Aire's transcriptional footprint. The range and magnitude of Aire-regulated genes was largely unaffected, the only genes additionally induced by Aire in this context being those already accessed for repression. In short, Aire's H3-binding module is necessary for Aire-mediated regulation of gene expression and central tolerance induction, but this influence is unlikely to reflect a targeting mechanism solely based on the recognition of hypomethylated H3K4 residues.
PU.1 and BCL11B sequentially cooperate with RUNX1 to anchor mSWI/SNF to poise the T cell effector landscape
Adaptive immunity relies on specialized effector functions elicited by lymphocytes, yet how antigen recognition activates appropriate effector responses through nonspecific signaling intermediates is unclear. Here we examined the role of chromatin priming in specifying the functional outputs of effector T cells and found that most of the cis -regulatory landscape active in effector T cells was poised early in development before the expression of the T cell antigen receptor. We identified two principal mechanisms underpinning this poised landscape: the recruitment of the nucleosome remodeler mammalian SWItch/Sucrose Non-Fermentable (mSWI/SNF) by the transcription factors RUNX1 and PU.1 to establish chromatin accessibility at T effector loci; and a ‘relay’ whereby the transcription factor BCL11B succeeded PU.1 to maintain occupancy of the chromatin remodeling complex mSWI/SNF together with RUNX1, after PU.1 silencing during lineage commitment. These mechanisms define modes by which T cells acquire the potential to elicit specialized effector functions early in their ontogeny and underscore the importance of integrating extrinsic cues to the developmentally specified intrinsic program. Koh et al. show that loci active in differentiated effector T cells are poised in early T precursors before the expression of T cell antigen receptors in a manner dependent on the chromatin remodeling complex mammalian SWItch/Sucrose Non-Fermentable and the PU.1–RUNX1 and BCL11B–RUNX1 complexes.
Global relevance of Aire binding to hypomethylated lysine-4 of histone-3
Aire promotes the ectopic expression of a repertoire of peripheral-tissue antigens (PTAs) in thymic medullary epithelial cells (MECs) to mediate deletional tolerance and thereby prevent autoimmunity. Binding of hypomethylated histone 3 (H3)-tails by Aire's plant homeodomain (PHD) finger is essential for Aire function in cultured cell models, prompting speculation that Aire-PHD:H3-tail interactions underlie targeting of Aire to weakly transcribed loci. To evaluate the role of Aire's PHD finger in MECs on a global scale in vivo, we complemented Aire-deficient mice with a mutant of Aire that inhibits its binding to hypomethylated H3K4 residues. Although the range of Aire-targeted genes was largely unaffected in these mice, the D299A mutation caused a global dampening of Aire's transcriptional impact, resulting in an autoimmune disease similar in profile to that of their Aire-deficient counterparts. To test whether a low H3K4 methylation state is sufficient for Aire targeting, we overexpressed an H3K4-specific demethylase in an Aire-dependent cultured cell system, and determined its capacity to extend Aire's transcriptional footprint. The range and magnitude of Aire-regulated genes was largely unaffected, the only genes additionally induced by Aire in this context being those already accessed for repression. In short, Aire's H3-binding module is necessary for Aire-mediated regulation of gene expression and central tolerance induction, but this influence is unlikely to reflect a targeting mechanism solely based on the recognition of hypomethylated H3K4 residues. [PUBLICATION ABSTRACT]
Intramuscular AZD7442 (Tixagevimab–Cilgavimab) for Prevention of Covid-19
This randomized, controlled trial evaluated AZD7442 (a combination of tixagevimab and cilgavimab, monoclonal antibodies targeting the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein) for the prevention of Covid-19 in adults at high risk for SARS-CoV-2 infection. AZD7442 was found to have approximately 77% efficacy in preventing symptomatic infection.
Inflammation arising from obesity reduces taste bud abundance and inhibits renewal
Despite evidence that the ability to taste is weakened by obesity and can be rescued with weight loss intervention, few studies have investigated the molecular effects of obesity on the taste system. Taste bud cells undergo continual turnover even in adulthood, exhibiting an average life span of only a few weeks, tightly controlled by a balance of proliferation and cell death. Recent data reveal that an acute inflammation event can alter this balance. We demonstrate that chronic low-grade inflammation brought on by obesity reduces the number of taste buds in gustatory tissues of mice-and is likely the cause of taste dysfunction seen in obese populations-by upsetting this balance of renewal and cell death.
Rapid ultrasensitive detection platform for antimicrobial susceptibility testing
Rapid detection and phenotyping of pathogenic microbes is critical for administration of effective antibiotic therapies and for impeding the spread of antibiotic resistance. Here, we present a novel platform, rapid ultrasensitive detector (RUSD), that utilizes the high reflectance coefficient at high incidence angles when light travels from low- to high-refractive-index media. RUSD leverages a principle that does not require complex manufacturing, labeling, or processing steps. Utilizing RUSD, we can detect extremely low cell densities (optical density [OD] ≥ 5 × 10-7) that correspond to approximately 20 bacterial cells or a single fungal cell in the detection volume, which is nearly 4 orders of magnitude more sensitive than standard OD methods. RUSD can measure minimum inhibitory concentrations (MICs) of commonly used antibiotics against gram-negative and gram-positive bacteria, including Staphylococcus aureus, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, and Escherichia coli, within 2 to 4 h. Here, we demonstrate that antibiotic susceptibility tests for several pathogens can rapidly be performed with RUSD using both small inoculum sizes (500 cells/mL) and larger inoculum sizes (5 × 105 cells/mL) used in standard antibiotic susceptibility tests. We anticipate that the RUSD system will be particularly useful for the cases in which antibiotic susceptibility tests have to be done with a limited number of bacterial cells that are available. Its compatibility with standard antibiotic susceptibility tests, simplicity, and low cost can make RUSD a viable and rapidly deployed diagnostic tool.