4.5 Article

Epigenetic control of CCR5 transcript levels in immune cells and modulation by small molecules inhibitors

Journal

JOURNAL OF CELLULAR AND MOLECULAR MEDICINE
Volume 16, Issue 8, Pages 1866-1877

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1582-4934.2011.01482.x

Keywords

chromatin remodelling; histone modifications; DNA methylation; bivalent chromatin; poised chromatin; CCR5; T cells; monocytes

Funding

  1. Netherlands Ministry of Economic Affairs
  2. Netherlands Ministry of Education, Culture and Science
  3. Dutch MS Research Foundation [MS 00-407, MS 04-543]
  4. Macropa Foundation
  5. Department of Immunohematology and Blood Transfusion
  6. European Union
  7. NIH, National Cancer Institute, Center for Cancer Research

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Previously, we have shown that CCR5 transcription is regulated by CREB-1. However, the ubiquitous pattern of CREB-1 expression suggests the involvement of an additional level of transcriptional control in the cell typespecific expression of CCR5. In this study, we show that epigenetic changes (i.e. DNA methylation and histone modifications) within the context of the CCR5 P1 promoter region correlate with transcript levels of CCR5 in healthy and in malignant CD4+ T lymphocytes as well as in CD14+ monocytes. In normal naive T cells and CD14+ monocytes the CCR5 P1 promoter resembles a bivalent chromatin state, with both repressive and permissive histone methylation and acetylation marks. The CCR5-expressing CD14+ monocytes however show much higher levels of acetylated histone H3 (AcH3) compared to the nonCCR5-expressing naive T cells. Combined with a highly methylated promoter in CD14+ monocytes, this indicates a dominant role for AcH3 in CCR5 transcription. We also show that pharmacological interference in the epigenetic repressive mechanisms that account for the lack of CCR5 transcription in T leukaemic cell lines results in an increase in CREB-1 association with CCR5 P1 chromatin. Furthermore, RNA polymerase II was also recruited into CCR5 P1 chromatin resulting in CCR5 re-expression. Together, these data indicate that epigenetic modifications of DNA, and of histones, contribute to the control of CCR5 transcription in immune effector cells.

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