Global DNA methylation remodeling accompanies CD8 T cell effector function

CD Scharer, BG Barwick, BA Youngblood… - The Journal of …, 2013 - journals.aai.org
The Journal of Immunology, 2013journals.aai.org
The differentiation of CD8 T cells in response to acute infection results in the acquisition of
hallmark phenotypic effector functions; however, the epigenetic mechanisms that program
this differentiation process on a genome-wide scale are largely unknown. In this article, we
report the DNA methylomes of Ag-specific naive and day-8 effector CD8 T cells following
acute lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus infection. During effector CD8 T cell differentiation,
DNA methylation was remodeled such that changes in DNA methylation at gene promoter …
Abstract
The differentiation of CD8 T cells in response to acute infection results in the acquisition of hallmark phenotypic effector functions; however, the epigenetic mechanisms that program this differentiation process on a genome-wide scale are largely unknown. In this article, we report the DNA methylomes of Ag-specific naive and day-8 effector CD8 T cells following acute lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus infection. During effector CD8 T cell differentiation, DNA methylation was remodeled such that changes in DNA methylation at gene promoter regions correlated negatively with gene expression. Importantly, differentially methylated regions were enriched at cis-elements, including enhancers active in naive T cells. Differentially methylated regions were associated with cell type–specific transcription factor binding sites, and these transcription factors clustered into modules that define networks targeted by epigenetic regulation and control of effector CD8 T cell function. Changes in the DNA methylation profile following CD8 T cell activation revealed numerous cellular processes, cis-elements, and transcription factor networks targeted by DNA methylation. Together, the results demonstrated that DNA methylation remodeling accompanies the acquisition of the CD8 T cell effector phenotype and repression of the naive cell state. Therefore, these data provide the framework for an epigenetic mechanism that is required for effector CD8 T cell differentiation and adaptive immune responses.
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