1. Academic Validation
  2. FOXP3 controls regulatory T cell function through cooperation with NFAT

FOXP3 controls regulatory T cell function through cooperation with NFAT

  • Cell. 2006 Jul 28;126(2):375-87. doi: 10.1016/j.cell.2006.05.042.
Yongqing Wu 1 Madhuri Borde Vigo Heissmeyer Markus Feuerer Ariya D Lapan James C Stroud Darren L Bates Liang Guo Aidong Han Steven F Ziegler Diane Mathis Christophe Benoist Lin Chen Anjana Rao
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of Colorado at Boulder, Boulder, CO 80309, USA.
Abstract

Antigen stimulation of immune cells activates the transcription factor NFAT, a key regulator of T cell activation and anergy. NFAT forms cooperative complexes with the AP-1 family of transcription factors and regulates T cell activation-associated genes. Here we show that regulatory T cell (Treg) function is mediated by an analogous cooperative complex of NFAT with the forkhead transcription factor FOXP3, a lineage specification factor for Tregs. The crystal structure of an NFAT:FOXP2:DNA complex reveals an extensive protein-protein interaction interface between NFAT and FOXP2. Structure-guided mutations of FOXP3, predicted to progressively disrupt its interaction with NFAT, interfere in a graded manner with the ability of FOXP3 to repress expression of the cytokine IL2, upregulate expression of the Treg markers CTLA4 and CD25, and confer suppressor function in a murine model of autoimmune diabetes. Thus by switching transcriptional partners, NFAT converts the acute T cell activation program into the suppressor program of Tregs.

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