Id proteins suppress E2A-driven invariant natural killer T cell development prior to TCR selection

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Abstract

A family of transcription factors known as E proteins, and their antagonists, Id proteins, regulate T cell differentiation at critical developmental checkpoints. Id proteins promote the differentiation of conventional αβ T cells and suppress the expansion of innate-like αβ T cells known as invariant natural killer T (iNKT) cells. However, it remains to be determined whether Id proteins differentially regulate these distinct lineage choices in early stages of T cell development. In this manuscript, we report that in Id-deficient mice, uninhibited activity of the E protein family member E2A mediates activation of genes that support iNKT cell development and function. There is also biased rearrangement in Id-deficient DP cells that promotes selection into the iNKT lineage in these mice. The observed expansion of iNKT cells is not abrogated by blocking pre-TCR signaling, which is required for conventional αβ T cell development. Finally, E2A is found to be a key transcriptional regulator of both iNKT and γΔNKT lineages, which appear to have shared lineage history. Therefore, our study reveals a previously unappreciated role of E2A in coordinating the development of the iNKT lineage at an early stage, prior to their TCR-mediated selection alongside conventional αβ T cells.

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Roy, S., Moore, A. J., Love, C., Reddy, A., Rajagopalan, D., Dave, S. S., … Zhuang, Y. (2018). Id proteins suppress E2A-driven invariant natural killer T cell development prior to TCR selection. Frontiers in Immunology, 9(JAN). https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2018.00042

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