Structure and specificity of GATA proteins in Th2 development

S Ranganath, KM Murphy - Molecular and cellular biology, 2001 - Am Soc Microbiol
Molecular and cellular biology, 2001Am Soc Microbiol
Abstract Development of Th2 subset of CD4+ T cells involves the interleukin-4 (IL-4)-and
Stat6-dependent increase in GATA-3 expression during primary activation. Recently we
reported that the phenotypic stability and factor independence of Th2 cells involves
acquisition of an intracellular pathway that maintains GATA-3 expression. Evidence from
retroviral expression studies implied that this pathway involved an autoactivation of GATA-3
expression, since Stat6-deficient T cells induced endogenous GATA-3 when infected with …
Abstract
Development of Th2 subset of CD4+ T cells involves the interleukin-4 (IL-4)-and Stat6-dependent increase in GATA-3 expression during primary activation. Recently we reported that the phenotypic stability and factor independence of Th2 cells involves acquisition of an intracellular pathway that maintains GATA-3 expression. Evidence from retroviral expression studies implied that this pathway involved an autoactivation of GATA-3 expression, since Stat6-deficient T cells induced endogenous GATA-3 when infected with GATA-3-expressing retroviruses. That study left unresolved the issue of whether GATA-3 autoactivation was direct or indirect. Several other Th2-specific transcription factors have been described, including c-Maf and JunB. We therefore examined the ability of these other transcription factors to induce GATA-3 expression and promote Th2 development. Neither c-Maf nor JunB induced Th2 development in Stat6-deficient CD4+ T cells, in contrast to GATA-3. Consistent with this indication of a possible direct autoactivation pathway, we also observed that heterologous GATA family proteins GATA-1, GATA-2, and GATA-4 were also capable of inducing GATA-3 expression in developing Stat6-deficient T cells and promote Th2 development. Mutational analysis revealed evidence for two distinct mechanisms of GATA-3 action. IL-4 induction by GATA-3 required each of the functional domains to be present, whereas repression of gamma interferon could occur even when mutants of GATA-3 lacking the second transactivation domain, TA2, were expressed. The GATA-dependent induction of the GATA-3 but not the other GATA genes in T cells suggests that T-cell-specific cis elements within the GATA-3 locus likely cooperate with a general GATA recognition motif to allow GATA-3-dependent autoactivation.
American Society for Microbiology