The histone methyltransferase Mixed-lineage-leukemia-1 drives T cell phenotype via Notch signaling in diabetic tissue repair

组蛋白甲基转移酶混合谱系白血病-1 通过 Notch 信号在糖尿病组织修复中驱动 T 细胞表型

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作者:William J Melvin, Tyler M Bauer, Kevin D Mangum, Christopher O Audu, James Shadiow, Emily C Barrett, Amrita D Joshi, Jadie Y Moon, Rachael Bogle, Purba Mazumder, Sonya J Wolf, Steven L Kunke, Johann E Gudjonsson, Frank M Davis, Katherine A Gallagher

Abstract

Immune cell-mediated inflammation is important in normal tissue regeneration but can be pathologic in diabetic wounds. Limited literature exists on the role of CD4+ T cells in normal or diabetic wound repair; however, the imbalance of CD4+ Th17/Tregs has been found to promote inflammation in other diabetic tissues. Here, using human tissue and murine transgenic models, we identified that the histone methyltransferase Mixed-lineage-leukemia-1 (MLL1) directly regulates the Th17 transcription factor RORγ via an H3K4me3 mechanism and increases expression of Notch receptors and downstream Notch signaling. Furthermore, we found that Notch receptor signaling regulates CD4+ Th cell differentiation and is critical for normal wound repair, and loss of upstream Notch pathway mediators or receptors in CD4+ T cells resulted in the loss of CD4+ Th cell differentiation in wounds. In diabetes, MLL1 and Notch-receptor signaling was upregulated in wound CD4+ Th cells, driving CD4+ T cells toward the Th17 cell phenotype. Treatment of diabetic wound CD4+ T cells with a small molecule inhibitor of MLL1 (MI-2) yielded a significant reduction in CD4+ Th17 cells and IL-17A. This is the first study to our knowledge to identify the MLL1-mediated mechanisms responsible for regulating the Th17/Treg balance in normal and diabetic wounds and to define the complex role of Notch signaling in CD4+ T cells in wounds, where increased or decreased Notch signaling both result in pathologic wound repair. Therapeutic targeting of MLL1 in diabetic CD4+ Th cells may decrease pathologic inflammation through regulation of CD4+ T cell differentiation.

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