Single-cell analysis of FOXP3 deficiencies in humans and mice unmasks intrinsic and extrinsic CD4 + T cell perturbations

Nature Immunology(2021)

引用 26|浏览1
暂无评分
摘要
FOXP3 deficiency in mice and in patients with immune dysregulation polyendocrinopathy enteropathy X-linked (IPEX) syndrome results in fatal autoimmunity by altering regulatory T (T reg ) cells. CD4 + T cells in patients with IPEX syndrome and Foxp3 -deficient mice were analyzed by single-cell cytometry and RNA-sequencing, revealing heterogeneous T reg -like cells, some very similar to normal T reg cells, others more distant. Conventional T cells showed no widespread activation or helper T cell bias, but a monomorphic disease signature affected all CD4 + T cells. This signature proved to be cell extrinsic since it was extinguished in mixed bone marrow chimeric mice and heterozygous mothers of patients with IPEX syndrome. Normal T reg cells exerted dominant suppression, quenching the disease signature and revealing in mutant T reg -like cells a small cluster of genes regulated cell-intrinsically by FOXP3, including key homeostatic regulators. We propose a two-step pathogenesis model: cell-intrinsic downregulation of core FOXP3-dependent genes destabilizes T reg cells, de-repressing systemic mediators that imprint the disease signature on all T cells, furthering T reg cell dysfunction. Accordingly, interleukin-2 treatment improved the T reg -like compartment and survival.
更多
查看译文
关键词
Autoimmunity,Gene regulation in immune cells,Biomedicine,general,Immunology,Infectious Diseases
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要