The Autoimmune Regulator (Aire) protein coordinates the negative selection of developing thymocytes by inducing the expression of hundreds of tissue‐specific antigens within the thymic medulla, which is also a primary… Click to show full abstract
The Autoimmune Regulator (Aire) protein coordinates the negative selection of developing thymocytes by inducing the expression of hundreds of tissue‐specific antigens within the thymic medulla, which is also a primary site of the expression of the immune checkpoint HLA‐G molecule. Considering the immunomodulatory properties of Aire and HLA‐G, and considering that the role of the constitutive thymus expression of HLA‐G has not been elucidated, we studied the effect of AIRE cDNA transfection on HLA‐G expression in 4D6 thymic cells and in the HLA‐G‐positive JEG‐3 choriocarcinoma cells. Aire promoted the transactivation of HLA‐G gene by increasing the overall transcription, inducing the transcription of at least G1 and G2/G4 isoforms, and incrementing the occurrence and distribution of intracellular HLA‐G protein solely in 4D6 thymic cells. Luciferase‐based assays and chromatin immunoprecipitation experiments performed in 4D6 cells revealed that Aire targeted at least two regions within the 5′‐untranslated regulatory region (5′‐URR) extending 1·4 kb from the first ATG initiation codon. The interaction occurs independently of three putative Aire‐binding sites. These results indicate that the Aire‐induced upregulation of HLA‐G in thymic cells is likely to act through the interaction of Aire with specific HLA‐G 5′‐URR DNA‐binding factors. Such a multimeric transcriptional complex might operate in the thymus during the process of promiscuous gene expression.
               
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