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Resolving mechanisms of immune-mediated disease in primary CD4 T cells.

Published version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Bourges, Christophe 
Groff, Abigail F 
Burren, Oliver S 
Gerhardinger, Chiara 
Mattioli, Kaia 

Abstract

Deriving mechanisms of immune-mediated disease from GWAS data remains a formidable challenge, with attempts to identify causal variants being frequently hampered by strong linkage disequilibrium. To determine whether causal variants could be identified from their functional effects, we adapted a massively parallel reporter assay for use in primary CD4 T cells, the cell type whose regulatory DNA is most enriched for immune-mediated disease SNPs. This enabled the effects of candidate SNPs to be examined in a relevant cellular context and generated testable hypotheses into disease mechanisms. To illustrate the power of this approach, we investigated a locus that has been linked to six immune-mediated diseases but cannot be fine-mapped. By studying the lead expression-modulating SNP, we uncovered an NF-κB-driven regulatory circuit which constrains T-cell activation through the dynamic formation of a super-enhancer that upregulates TNFAIP3 (A20), a key NF-κB inhibitor. In activated T cells, this feedback circuit is disrupted-and super-enhancer formation prevented-by the risk variant at the lead SNP, leading to unrestrained T-cell activation via a molecular mechanism that appears to broadly predispose to human autoimmunity.

Description

Keywords

GWAS, MPRA, CD4 T cells, TNFAIP3, super-enhancer, Autoimmunity, CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes, Humans, NF-kappa B, Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide

Journal Title

EMBO Mol Med

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1757-4676
1757-4684

Volume Title

12

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Sponsorship
Wellcome Trust (105920/Z/14/Z)
Wellcome Trust (107881/Z/15/Z)
Medical Research Council (MC_UU_00002/4)
Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EP/R511870/1)