c-Rel employs multiple mechanisms to promote the thymic development and peripheral function of regulatory T cells in mice.
Thomas S FulfordRaelene GrumontRushika C WirasinhaDarcy EllisAdele BarugahareStephen J TurnerHaroon NaeemDavid PowellPaul A LyonsKenneth G C SmithSebastian ScheerColby ZaphUlf KleinStephen R DaleySteve GerondakisPublished in: European journal of immunology (2021)
The NF-κB transcription factor c-Rel is a critical regulator of Treg ontogeny, controlling multiple points of the stepwise developmental pathway. Here, we found that the thymic Treg defect in c-Rel-deficient (cRel-/- ) mice is quantitative, not qualitative, based on analyses of TCR repertoire and TCR signaling strength. However, these parameters are altered in the thymic Treg-precursor population, which is also markedly diminished in cRel-/- mice. Moreover, c-Rel governs the transcriptional programme of both thymic and peripheral Tregs, controlling a core of genes involved with immune signaling, and separately in the periphery, cell cycle progression. Last, the immune suppressive function of peripheral cRel-/- tTregs is diminished in a lymphopenic model of T cell proliferation and is associated with decreased stability of Foxp3 expression. Collectively, we show that c-Rel is a transcriptional regulator that controls multiple aspects of Treg development, differentiation, and function via distinct mechanisms.
Keyphrases
- regulatory t cells
- transcription factor
- cell cycle
- cell proliferation
- dendritic cells
- high fat diet induced
- wild type
- gene expression
- poor prognosis
- dna binding
- pi k akt
- signaling pathway
- oxidative stress
- adipose tissue
- type diabetes
- lps induced
- systematic review
- inflammatory response
- immune response
- randomized controlled trial
- heat shock
- nuclear factor
- long non coding rna
- binding protein