Class IIa HDAC4 and HDAC7 cooperatively regulate gene transcription in Th17 cell differentiation.
Ka Lung CheungLi ZhaoRajal SharmaAnurupa Abhijit GhoshMichael AppiahYifei SunAnbalagan JaganathanYuan HuAlannah LejeuneFeihong XuXinye HanXueting WangFan ZhangChunyan RenMartin J WalshHuabao XiongAlexander TsankovMing-Ming ZhouPublished in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2024)
Class II histone deacetylases (HDACs) are important in regulation of gene transcription during T cell development. However, our understanding of their cell-specific functions is limited. In this study, we reveal that class IIa Hdac4 and Hdac7 (Hdac4/7) are selectively induced in transcription, guiding the lineage-specific differentiation of mouse T-helper 17 (Th17) cells from naive CD4 + T cells. Importantly, Hdac4/7 are functionally dispensable in other Th subtypes. Mechanistically, Hdac4 interacts with the transcription factor (TF) JunB, facilitating the transcriptional activation of Th17 signature genes such as Il17a/f . Conversely, Hdac7 collaborates with the TF Aiolos and Smrt/Ncor1-Hdac3 corepressors to repress transcription of Th17 negative regulators, including Il2 , in Th17 cell differentiation. Inhibiting Hdac4/7 through pharmacological or genetic methods effectively mitigates Th17 cell-mediated intestinal inflammation in a colitis mouse model. Our study uncovers molecular mechanisms where HDAC4 and HDAC7 function distinctively yet cooperatively in regulating ordered gene transcription during Th17 cell differentiation. These findings suggest a potential therapeutic strategy of targeting HDAC4/7 for treating Th17-related inflammatory diseases, such as ulcerative colitis.