4.8 Article

Targeted De-Methylation of the FOXP3-TSDR Is Sufficient to Induce Physiological FOXP3 Expression but Not a Functional Treg Phenotype

Journal

FRONTIERS IN IMMUNOLOGY
Volume 11, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2020.609891

Keywords

T cell differentiation; regulatory T cells; epigenetic editing; adoptive T cell therapies; gene regulation; CRISPR-Cas9-based tool

Categories

Funding

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [PO2058/1-1]
  2. Leibniz Gemeinschaft [K59/2017]
  3. European Research Council (EpiTune, ERC Starting grant 2018)
  4. ReShape Horizon 2020 program [825332]
  5. German Federal Ministry of Research and Education grant [031L0101D]

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This study investigated the epigenetic regulation of Treg cells, demonstrating that demethylation of TSDR can induce FOXP3 expression but is not sufficient for stable induction of functional Treg cell phenotype.
CD4+ regulatory T cells (Tregs) are key mediators of immunological tolerance and promising effector cells for immuno-suppressive adoptive cellular therapy to fight autoimmunity and chronic inflammation. Their functional stability is critical for their clinical utility and has been correlated to the demethylated state of the TSDR/CNS2 enhancer element in the Treg lineage transcription factor FOXP3. However, proof for a causal contribution of the TSDR de-methylation to FOXP3 stability and Treg induction is so far lacking. We here established a powerful transient-transfection CRISPR-Cas9-based epigenetic editing method for the selective de-methylation of the TSDR within the endogenous chromatin environment of a living cell. The induced de-methylated state was stable over weeks in clonal T cell proliferation cultures even after expression of the editing complex had ceased. Epigenetic editing of the TSDR resulted in FOXP3 expression, even in its physiological isoform distribution, proving a causal role for the de-methylated TSDR in FOXP3 regulation. However, successful FOXP3 induction was not associated with a switch towards a functional Treg phenotype, in contrast to what has been reported from FOXP3 overexpression approaches. Thus, TSDR de-methylation is required, but not sufficient for a stable Treg phenotype induction. Therefore, targeted demethylation of the TSDR may be a critical addition to published in vitro Treg induction protocols which so far lack FOXP3 stability.

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