The histone demethylase UTX regulates the lineage-specific epigenetic program of invariant natural killer T cells.

Nat Immunol
Authors
Abstract

Invariant natural killer T cells (iNKT cells) are innate-like lymphocytes that protect against infection, autoimmune disease and cancer. However, little is known about the epigenetic regulation of iNKT cell development. Here we found that the H3K27me3 histone demethylase UTX was an essential cell-intrinsic factor that controlled an iNKT-cell lineage-specific gene-expression program and epigenetic landscape in a demethylase-activity-dependent manner. UTX-deficient iNKT cells exhibited impaired expression of iNKT cell signature genes due to a decrease in activation-associated H3K4me3 marks and an increase in repressive H3K27me3 marks within the promoters occupied by UTX. We found that JunB regulated iNKT cell development and that the expression of genes that were targets of both JunB and the iNKT cell master transcription factor PLZF was UTX dependent. We identified iNKT cell super-enhancers and demonstrated that UTX-mediated regulation of super-enhancer accessibility was a key mechanism for commitment to the iNKT cell lineage. Our findings reveal how UTX regulates the development of iNKT cells through multiple epigenetic mechanisms.

Year of Publication
2017
Journal
Nat Immunol
Volume
18
Issue
2
Pages
184-195
Date Published
2017 Feb
ISSN
1529-2916
DOI
10.1038/ni.3644
PubMed ID
27992400
PubMed Central ID
PMC5247321
Links
Grant list
K99 HG008399 / HG / NHGRI NIH HHS / United States
R01 AI083426 / AI / NIAID NIH HHS / United States
R01 HL119099 / HL / NHLBI NIH HHS / United States