Regulation of CD4 T-cell differentiation and inflammation by repressive histone methylation

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Abstract

Repressive epigenetic modifications such as dimethylation and trimethylation histone H3 at lysine 9 (H3K9me2 and H3K9me3) and H3K27me3 have been shown to be critical for embryonic stem (ES) cell differentiation by silencing cell lineage-promiscuous genes. CD4 + T helper (T H) cell differentiation is a powerful model to study the molecular mechanisms associated with cellular lineage choice in adult cells. Naïve T H cells have the capacity to differentiate into one of the several phenotypically and functionally distinct and stable lineages. Although some repressive epigenetic mechanisms have a critical role in T H cell differentiation in a similar manner to that in ES cells, it is clear that there are disparate functions for certain modifications between ES cells and T H cells. Here we review the role of repressive histone modifications in the differentiation and function of T H cells in health and disease.

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Antignano, F., & Zaph, C. (2015, March 19). Regulation of CD4 T-cell differentiation and inflammation by repressive histone methylation. Immunology and Cell Biology. Nature Publishing Group. https://doi.org/10.1038/icb.2014.115

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