Conversion of antigen-specific effector/memory T cells into Foxp3-expressing Treg cells by inhibition of CDK8/19

M Akamatsu, N Mikami, N Ohkura, R Kawakami… - Science …, 2019 - science.org
M Akamatsu, N Mikami, N Ohkura, R Kawakami, Y Kitagawa, A Sugimoto, K Hirota
Science Immunology, 2019science.org
A promising way to restrain hazardous immune responses, such as autoimmune disease
and allergy, is to convert disease-mediating T cells into immunosuppressive regulatory T
(Treg) cells. Here, we show that chemical inhibition of the cyclin-dependent kinase 8 (CDK8)
and CDK19, or knockdown/knockout of the CDK8 or CDK19 gene, is able to induce Foxp3, a
key transcription factor controlling Treg cell function, in antigen-stimulated effector/memory
as well as naïve CD4+ and CD8+ T cells. The induction was associated with STAT5 …
A promising way to restrain hazardous immune responses, such as autoimmune disease and allergy, is to convert disease-mediating T cells into immunosuppressive regulatory T (Treg) cells. Here, we show that chemical inhibition of the cyclin-dependent kinase 8 (CDK8) and CDK19, or knockdown/knockout of the CDK8 or CDK19 gene, is able to induce Foxp3, a key transcription factor controlling Treg cell function, in antigen-stimulated effector/memory as well as naïve CD4+ and CD8+ T cells. The induction was associated with STAT5 activation, independent of TGF-β action, and not affected by inflammatory cytokines. Furthermore, in vivo administration of a newly developed CDK8/19 inhibitor along with antigen immunization generated functionally stable antigen-specific Foxp3+ Treg cells, which effectively suppressed skin contact hypersensitivity and autoimmune disease in animal models. The results indicate that CDK8/19 is physiologically repressing Foxp3 expression in activated conventional T cells and that its pharmacological inhibition enables conversion of antigen-specific effector/memory T cells into Foxp3+ Treg cells for the treatment of various immunological diseases.
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