Regulatory T cells (T cells) perform two distinct functions: they maintain self-tolerance, and they support organ homeostasis by differentiating into specialized tissue T cells. We found that epigenetic modifications defined the molecular characteristics of tissue T cells. Tagmentation-based whole-genome bisulfite sequencing revealed more than 11,000 regions that were methylated differentially in pairwise comparisons of tissue T cell populations and lymphoid T cells. Similarities in the epigenetic landscape led to the identification of a common tissue T cell population that was present in many organs and was characterized by gain and loss of DNA methylation that included many gene sites associated with the T2 subset of helper T cells, such as the gene encoding cytokine IL-33 receptor ST2, as well as the production of tissue-regenerative factors. Furthermore, the ST2-expressing population was dependent on the transcriptional regulator BATF and could be expanded by IL-33. Thus, tissue T cells integrate multiple waves of epigenetic reprogramming that define their tissue-restricted specialization.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5912503 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/ni.3799 | DOI Listing |
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