DNA methylation regulates the neonatal CD4+ T-cell response to pneumonia in mice.
Sharon A McGrath-MorrowRoland NdehKathryn A HelminShang-Yang ChenKishore R AnekallaHiam Abdala-ValenciaFranco R D'AlessioJ Michael CollacoBenjamin David SingerPublished in: The Journal of biological chemistry (2018)
Pediatric acute lung injury, usually because of pneumonia, has a mortality rate of more than 20% and an incidence that rivals that of all childhood cancers combined. CD4+ T-cells coordinate the immune response to pneumonia but fail to function robustly among the very young, who have poor outcomes from lung infection. We hypothesized that DNA methylation represses a mature CD4+ T-cell transcriptional program in neonates with pneumonia. Here, we found that neonatal mice (3-4 days old) aspirated with Escherichia coli bacteria had a higher mortality rate than juvenile mice (11-14 days old). Transcriptional profiling with an unsupervised RNA-Seq approach revealed that neonates displayed an attenuated lung CD4+ T-cell transcriptional response to pneumonia compared with juveniles. Unlike neonates, juveniles up-regulated a robust set of canonical T-cell immune response genes. DNA methylation profiling with modified reduced representation bisulfite sequencing revealed 44,119 differentially methylated CpGs, which preferentially clustered around transcriptional start sites and CpG islands. A methylation difference-filtering algorithm detected genes with a high likelihood of differential promoter methylation regulating their expression; these 731 loci encoded important immune response and tissue-protective T-cell pathway components. Disruption of DNA methylation with the hypomethylating agent decitabine induced plasticity in the lung CD4+ T-cell marker phenotype. Altogether, multidimensional profiling suggested that DNA methylation within the promoters of a core set of CD4+ T-cell pathway genes contributes to the hyporesponsive neonatal immune response to pneumonia. These findings also suggest that DNA methylation could serve as a mechanistic target for disease-modifying therapies in pediatric lung infection and injury.
Keyphrases
- dna methylation
- genome wide
- single cell
- gene expression
- rna seq
- immune response
- transcription factor
- copy number
- escherichia coli
- machine learning
- high fat diet induced
- risk factors
- cardiovascular events
- respiratory failure
- poor prognosis
- oxidative stress
- type diabetes
- dendritic cells
- insulin resistance
- coronary artery disease
- lipopolysaccharide induced
- toll like receptor
- cardiovascular disease
- deep learning
- intensive care unit
- quality improvement
- middle aged
- adipose tissue
- staphylococcus aureus
- lps induced
- stress induced