Functional CRISPR dissection of gene networks controlling human regulatory T cell identity.
Citation | Schumann, Kathrin, et al. “Functional CRISPR Dissection of Gene Networks Controlling Human Regulatory T Cell Identity”. 2020. Nature Immunology, vol. 21, no. 11, 2020, pp. 1456–1466. |
Author | Kathrin Schumann, Siddharth S Raju, Michael Lauber, Saskia Kolb, Eric Shifrut, Jessica T Cortez, Nikolaos Skartsis, Vinh Q Nguyen, Jonathan M Woo, Theodore L Roth, Ruby Yu, Michelle L T Nguyen, Dimitre R Simeonov, David N Nguyen, Sasha Targ, Rachel E Gate, Qizhi Tang, Jeffrey A Bluestone, Matthew H Spitzer, Chun Jimmie Ye, Alexander Marson |
Abstract |
Human regulatory T (T) cells are essential for immune homeostasis. The transcription factor FOXP3 maintains T cell identity, yet the complete set of key transcription factors that control T cell gene expression remains unknown. Here, we used pooled and arrayed Cas9 ribonucleoprotein screens to identify transcription factors that regulate critical proteins in primary human T cells under basal and proinflammatory conditions. We then generated 54,424 single-cell transcriptomes from T cells subjected to genetic perturbations and cytokine stimulation, which revealed distinct gene networks individually regulated by FOXP3 and PRDM1, in addition to a network coregulated by FOXO1 and IRF4. We also discovered that HIVEP2, to our knowledge not previously implicated in T cell function, coregulates another gene network with SATB1 and is important for T cell-mediated immunosuppression. By integrating CRISPR screens and single-cell RNA-sequencing profiling, we have uncovered transcriptional regulators and downstream gene networks in human T cells that could be targeted for immunotherapies. |
Year of Publication |
2020
|
Journal |
Nature immunology
|
Volume |
21
|
Issue |
11
|
Number of Pages |
1456-1466
|
Date Published |
11/2020
|
ISSN Number |
1529-2916
|
DOI |
10.1038/s41590-020-0784-4
|
Alternate Journal |
Nat Immunol
|
PMID |
32989329
|
PMCID |
PMC7577958
|
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