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Priming of transcriptional memory responses via the chromatin accessibility landscape in T cells

  • Wen Juan Tu
  • , Kristine Hardy
  • , Christopher R. Sutton
  • , Robert McCuaig
  • , Jasmine Li
  • , Jenny Dunn
  • , Abel Tan
  • , Vedran Brezar
  • , Melanie Morris
  • , Gareth Denyer
  • , Sau Kuen Lee
  • , Stephen J. Turner
  • , Nabila Seddiki
  • , Corey Smith
  • , Rajiv Khanna
  • , Sudha Rao*
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

18 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Memory T cells exhibit transcriptional memory and "remember" their previous pathogenic encounter to increase transcription on re-infection. However, how this transcriptional priming response is regulated is unknown. Here we performed global FAIRE-seq profiling of chromatin accessibility in a human T cell transcriptional memory model. Primary activation induced persistent accessibility changes, and secondary activation induced secondary-specific opening of previously less accessible regions associated with enhanced expression of memory-responsive genes. Increased accessibility occurred largely in distal regulatory regions and was associated with increased histone acetylation and relative H3.3 deposition. The enhanced re-stimulation response was linked to the strength of initial PKC-induced signalling, and PKC-sensitive increases in accessibility upon initial stimulation showed higher accessibility on re-stimulation. While accessibility maintenance was associated with ETS-1, accessibility at re-stimulation-specific regions was linked to NFAT, especially in combination with ETS-1, EGR, GATA, NF-κ B, and NR4A. Furthermore, NFATC1 was directly regulated by ETS-1 at an enhancer region. In contrast to the factors that increased accessibility, signalling from bHLH and ZEB family members enhanced decreased accessibility upon re-stimulation. Interplay between distal regulatory elements, accessibility, and the combined action of sequence-specific transcription factors allows transcriptional memory-responsive genes to "remember" their initial environmental encounter.

Original languageEnglish
Article number44825
JournalScientific Reports
Volume7
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 20 Mar 2017
Externally publishedYes

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