miR-150 promotes progressive T cell differentiation via inhibiting FOXP1 and RC3H1.

Hum Immunol

Guangdong Province Key Laboratory of Biotechnology Drug Candidates, Guangdong Pharmaceutical University, Guangzhou, China; School of Life Sciences and Biopharmaceutics, Guangdong Pharmaceutical University, Guangzhou, China.

Published: November 2022

T cells used in immune cell therapy, represented by T cell receptor therapy (TCR-T), are usually activated and proliferated in vitro and are induced to a terminally differentiated phenotype, with limited viability after transfusion back into the body. T cells exhibited a robust proliferative potential and in vivo viability in the early stages of progressive differentiation. In this study, we identified microRNAs that regulate T cell differentiation. After microRNA sequencing of the four subsets: Naïve T cells (T), stem cell-like memory T cells (T), central memory T cells (T), and effector memory T cells (T), miR-150 was identified as the most highly expressed miRNA among the four subsets and was lowly expressed in the T cells. We predicted the target genes of miR-150 miRNA and performed Gene Ontology and Kyoto Encyclopaedia of Genes and Genomes analyses. We observed that the target genes of miR-150 were enriched in pathways associated with T-cell differentiation. FOXP1 and RC3H1 were identified as key target genes of miR-150 in the regulation of T-cell function. We examined the effects of miR-150 on the differentiation and function of healthy donor T-cells. We observed that miR-150 overexpression promoted T-cell differentiation to effector T-cells and effector memory T-cells, enhanced apoptosis, inhibited cell proliferation and increased secretion of pro-inflammatory cytokines such as IFN-γ and TNF-α. In addition, the expressions of early differentiation-related genes (ACTN1, CERS6, BCL2, and EOMES), advanced differentiation-related genes (KLRG1), and effector-function-related genes (PRF1 and GZMB) were significantly decreased after overexpression of miR-150. Collectively, our results suggested that miR-150 can promote progressive differentiation of T cells and the downmodulation of miR-150 expression while performing adoptive immunotherapy may inhibit T-cell differentiation and increase the proliferative potential of T cells.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.humimm.2022.08.006DOI Listing

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