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Histone deficiency and accelerated replication stress in T cell aging

Authors
Kim, ChulwoJin, JunYe, ZhongdeJadhav, Rohit R.Gustafson, Claire E.Hu, BinCao, WenqiangTian, LuWeyand, Cornelia M.Goronzy, Joerg J.
Issue Date
1-6월-2021
Publisher
AMER SOC CLINICAL INVESTIGATION INC
Citation
JOURNAL OF CLINICAL INVESTIGATION, v.131, no.11
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
JOURNAL OF CLINICAL INVESTIGATION
Volume
131
Number
11
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/137316
DOI
10.1172/JCI143632
ISSN
0021-9738
Abstract
With increasing age, individuals are more vulnerable to viral infections such as with influenza or the SARS-CoV-2 virus. One age-associated defect in human T cells is the reduced expression of miR-181a. miR-181ab1 deficiency in peripheral murine T cells causes delayed viral clearance after infection, resembling human immune aging. Here we show that naive T cells from older individuals as well as miR-181ab1-deficient murine T cells develop excessive replication stress after activation, due to reduced histone expression and delayed S-phase cell cycle progression. Reduced histone expression was caused by the miR-181a target SIRT1 that directly repressed transcription of histone genes by binding to their promoters and reducing histone acetylation. Inhibition of SIRT1 activity or SIRT1 silencing increased histone expression, restored cell cycle progression, diminished the replication-stress response, and reduced the production of inflammatory mediators in replicating T cells from old individuals. Correspondingly, treatment with SIRT1 inhibitors improved viral clearance in mice with miR-181a-deficient T cells after LCMV infection. In conclusion, SIRT1 inhibition may be beneficial to treat systemic viral infection in older individuals by targeting antigen-specific T cells that develop replication stress due to miR-181a deficiency.
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