Prmt5 deficiency inhibits CD4+ T-cell Klf2/S1pr1 expression and ameliorates EAE disease
Yingxia Zheng, Zheyi Chen, Bingqian Zhou, Shiyu Chen, Ningdai Chen, Lisong Shen
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Protein arginine methyltransferase 5 (Prmt5) is the main type II methyltransferase, catalyzes protein arginine residue symmetric dimethylation, and modulates normal cellular physiology and disease progression. Prmt5 inhibition or deletion in CD4+ T cells has been reported to ameliorate experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE), but the detailed molecular mechanisms have not yet been elucidated. METHODS: (WT) mice. Flow cytometry, single-cell RNA sequencing, ATAC sequencing and chromatin immunoprecipitation assay (ChIP) approaches were used to explore the detail mechanisms. RESULTS: We find that Prmt5cko mice are resistant to EAE; infiltrating inflammatory CD4+ T cells in the central nervous system (CNS) are greatly reduced. However, in Prmt5cko mice, T cells in the spleen show much more proliferation and activation properties, the total number of CD4+ T cells in the spleen is not reduced, and the percentage of Rora+ CD4+ T cells is elevated. Also, CD4+ T cells express lower levels of S1pr1 and Klf2 than WT mice, which may influence pathogenic CD4+ T-cell egress from the spleen and migration to the CNS. Moreover, the single-cell ATAC sequence and ChIP assay reveal that the transcription factor Klf2 is enriched at the S1pr1 promoter and that Klf2 motif activity is reduced in Prmt5cko mice. CONCLUSIONS: Our study delineates the undiscovered role of Prmt5 in T-cell biology in which Prmt5 may inhibit Klf2-S1pr1 pathway to ameliorate EAE disease. Controlling T-cell Prmt5 expression may be helpful for the treatment of autoimmune diseases.