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Evolutionarily conserved sequence elements that positively regulate IFN-γ expression in T cells
Author(s) -
Maria Shnyreva,
William M. Weaver,
Mathieu Blanchette,
Scott L. Taylor,
Martin Tompa,
David Fitzpatrick,
Christopher B. Wilson
Publication year - 2004
Publication title -
proceedings of the national academy of sciences
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1091-6490
pISSN - 0027-8424
DOI - 10.1073/pnas.0400849101
Subject(s) - biology , ionomycin , microbiology and biotechnology , effector , transfection , t cell , gene expression , gene , cd8 , regulation of gene expression , cytotoxic t cell , genetics , immune system , in vitro
Our understanding of mechanisms by which the expression of IFN-gamma is regulated is limited. Herein, we identify two evolutionarily conserved noncoding sequence elements (IFNgCNS1 and IFNg CNS2) located approximately 5 kb upstream and approximately 18 kb downstream of the initiation codon of the murine Ifng gene. When linked to the murine Ifng gene (-3.4 to +5.6 kb) and transiently transfected into EL-4 cells, these elements clearly enhanced IFN-gamma expression in response to ionomycin and phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate and weakly enhanced expression in response to T-bet. A DNase I hypersensitive site and extragenic transcripts at IFNgCNS2 correlated positively with the capacity of primary T cell subsets to produce IFN-gamma. Transcriptionally favorable histone modifications in the Ifng promoter, intronic regions, IFNgCNS2, and, although less pronounced, IFNgCNS1 increased as naïve T cells differentiated into IFN-gamma-producing effector CD8+ and T helper (TH) 1 T cells, but not into TH2 T cells. Like IFN-gamma expression, these histone modifications were T-bet-dependent in CD4+ cells, but not CD8+ T cells. These findings define two distal regulatory elements associated with T cell subset-specific IFN-gamma expression.

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