Human epigenetic and transcriptional T cell differentiation atlas for identifying functional T cell-specific enhancers
生物
表观遗传学
染色质
计算生物学
细胞分化
效应器
增强子
T细胞
基因表达调控
遗传学
作者
Josephine R. Giles,Sasikanth Manne,Elizabeth Freilich,Derek A. Oldridge,Amy E. Baxter,Sangeeth George,Zeyu Chen,Hua Huang,Lakshmi Chilukuri,Mary Carberry,Lydia Giles,Nan-Ping P. Weng,Regina M. Young,Carl H. June,Lynn M. Schuchter,Ravi K. Amaravadi,Xiaowei Xu,Giorgos C. Karakousis,Tara C. Mitchell,Alexander C. Huang,Junwei Shi,E. John Wherry
The clinical benefit of T cell immunotherapies remains limited by incomplete understanding of T cell differentiation and dysfunction. We generated an epigenetic and transcriptional atlas of T cell differentiation from healthy humans that included exhausted CD8 T cells and applied this resource in three ways. First, we identified modules of gene expression and chromatin accessibility, revealing molecular coordination of differentiation after activation and between central memory and effector memory. Second, we applied this healthy molecular framework to three settings—a neoadjuvant anti-PD1 melanoma trial, a basal cell carcinoma scATAC-seq dataset, and autoimmune disease-associated SNPs—yielding insights into disease-specific biology. Third, we predicted genome-wide cis-regulatory elements and validated this approach for key effector genes using CRISPR interference, providing functional annotation and demonstrating the ability to identify targets for non-coding cellular engineering. These studies define epigenetic and transcriptional regulation of human T cells and illustrate the utility of interrogating disease in the context of a healthy T cell atlas.