A systematic comparison of FOSL1, FOSL2 and BATF-mediated transcriptional regulation during early human Th17 differentiation

التفاصيل البيبلوغرافية
العنوان: A systematic comparison of FOSL1, FOSL2 and BATF-mediated transcriptional regulation during early human Th17 differentiation
المؤلفون: Ankitha, Shetty, Subhash Kumar, Tripathi, Sini, Junttila, Tanja, Buchacher, Rahul, Biradar, Santosh D, Bhosale, Tapio, Envall, Asta, Laiho, Robert, Moulder, Omid, Rasool, Sanjeev, Galande, Laura L, Elo, Riitta, Lahesmaa
المصدر: Nucleic acids research. 50(9)
سنة النشر: 2022
مصطلحات موضوعية: Transcription Factor AP-1, Mice, Basic-Leucine Zipper Transcription Factors, Gene Expression Regulation, Animals, Humans, Th17 Cells, Cell Differentiation, Fos-Related Antigen-2, Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-fos
الوصف: Th17 cells are essential for protection against extracellular pathogens, but their aberrant activity can cause autoimmunity. Molecular mechanisms that dictate Th17 cell-differentiation have been extensively studied using mouse models. However, species-specific differences underscore the need to validate these findings in human. Here, we characterized the human-specific roles of three AP-1 transcription factors, FOSL1, FOSL2 and BATF, during early stages of Th17 differentiation. Our results demonstrate that FOSL1 and FOSL2 co-repress Th17 fate-specification, whereas BATF promotes the Th17 lineage. Strikingly, FOSL1 was found to play different roles in human and mouse. Genome-wide binding analysis indicated that FOSL1, FOSL2 and BATF share occupancy over regulatory regions of genes involved in Th17 lineage commitment. These AP-1 factors also share their protein interacting partners, which suggests mechanisms for their functional interplay. Our study further reveals that the genomic binding sites of FOSL1, FOSL2 and BATF harbour hundreds of autoimmune disease-linked SNPs. We show that many of these SNPs alter the ability of these transcription factors to bind DNA. Our findings thus provide critical insights into AP-1-mediated regulation of human Th17-fate and associated pathologies.
تدمد: 1362-4962
URL الوصول: https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=pmid________::cd97cd0789cb1c59e5f88577ac123b26
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35511484
Rights: OPEN
رقم الانضمام: edsair.pmid..........cd97cd0789cb1c59e5f88577ac123b26
قاعدة البيانات: OpenAIRE