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- 249177 (1)
Wiskott–Aldrich syndrome (WAS) is caused by loss-of-function mutations in theWASp gene.
Decreased cellular responses in WASp-deficient cells have been interpreted to mean that
WASp directly regulates these responses in WASp-sufficient cells. Here, we identify an
exception to this concept and show that WASp-deficient dendritic cells have increased
activation of Rac2 that support cross-presentation to CD8þ T cells. Using two different skin
pathology models, WASp-deficient mice show an accumulation of dendritic cells in the skin
and increased expansion of IFNg-producing CD8þ T cells in the draining lymph node and
spleen. Specific deletion of WASp in dendritic cells leads to marked expansion of CD8þ
T cells at the expense of CD4þ T cells. WASp-deficient dendritic cells induce increased
cross-presentation to CD8þ T cells by activating Rac2 that maintains a near neutral pH of
phagosomes. Our data reveals an intricate balance between activation of WASp and Rac2
signalling pathways in dendritic cells.
Background
The Wiskott–Aldrich syndrome protein (WASp) family of actin-nucleating factors are present in the cytoplasm and in the nucleus. The role of nuclear WASp for T cell development remains incompletely defined.
Methods
We performed WASp chromatin immunoprecipitation and deep sequencing (ChIP-seq) in thymocytes and spleen CD4\(^+\) T cells.
Results
WASp was enriched at genic and intergenic regions and associated with the transcription start sites of protein-coding genes. Thymocytes and spleen CD4\(^+\) T cells showed 15 common WASp-interacting genes, including the gene encoding T cell factor (TCF)12. WASp KO thymocytes had reduced nuclear TCF12 whereas thymocytes expressing constitutively active WASp\(^{L272P}\) and WASp\(^{I296T}\) had increased nuclear TCF12, suggesting that regulated WASp activity controlled nuclear TCF12. We identify a putative DNA element enriched in WASp ChIP-seq samples identical to a TCF1-binding site and we show that WASp directly interacted with TCF1 in the nucleus.
Conclusions
These data place nuclear WASp in proximity with TCF1 and TCF12, essential factors for T cell development.