IL-12 signaling promotes TET2-mediated DNA demethylation during CD8 T cell effector differentiation
Zebley, C.; Abdelsamed, H.; Ghoneim, H.; Alli, S.; Haydar, D.; Harris, T.; Mcgargill, M.; Krenciute, G.; Youngblood, B.
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CD8 T cell memory differentiation endows T cells with an ability to rapidly induce effector functions upon pathogen re-encounter. While it is well established that substantial epigenetic remodeling occurs during the effector stage of the immune response, the signaling events that imprint CD8 T cells with these stable epigenetic programs are not well-defined. To gain insight into the signaling determinants of effector-associated epigenetic programming among CD8 T cells, we explored the role of IL-12 in the imprinting of IFNg expression during human CD8 T cell priming. We observed that TCR-mediated stimulation of human naive CD8 T cells is not sufficient to induce substantial demethylation of the IFNg promotor. However, TCR stimulation in the presence of the inflammatory cytokine, IL-12, resulted in significant and stable demethylation of the IFNg locus that was commensurate with an increase in IFNg expression. We further show that IL-12-associated demethylation of the IFNg locus is coupled to cell division through TET2-dependent passive demethylation in an ex vivo human CAR T cell model system and an in vivo immunologically competent murine system. Collectively, these data illustrate that IL-12 signaling promotes TET2-mediated effector epigenetic programming in CD8 T cells during the primary immune response and serve as proof of concept that signal 3 cytokines can be used to guide the induction of epigenetically regulated traits among T cells used for adoptive immunotherapies.
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