Aire

D Mathis, C Benoist - Annual review of immunology, 2009 - annualreviews.org
D Mathis, C Benoist
Annual review of immunology, 2009annualreviews.org
Mutations in the transcriptional regulator, Aire, cause APECED, a polyglandular autoimmune
disease with monogenic transmission. Animal models of APECED have revealed that Aire
plays an important role in T cell tolerance induction in the thymus, mainly by promoting
ectopic expression of a large repertoire of transcripts encoding proteins normally restricted
to differentiated organs residing in the periphery. The absence of Aire results in impaired
clonal deletion of self-reactive thymocytes, which escape into the periphery and attack a …
Mutations in the transcriptional regulator, Aire, cause APECED, a polyglandular autoimmune disease with monogenic transmission. Animal models of APECED have revealed that Aire plays an important role in T cell tolerance induction in the thymus, mainly by promoting ectopic expression of a large repertoire of transcripts encoding proteins normally restricted to differentiated organs residing in the periphery. The absence of Aire results in impaired clonal deletion of self-reactive thymocytes, which escape into the periphery and attack a variety of organs. In addition, Aire is a proapoptotic factor, expressed at the final maturation stage of thymic medullary epithelial cells, a function that may promote cross-presentation of the antigens encoded by Aire-induced transcripts in these cells. Transcriptional regulation by Aire is unusual in being very broad, context-dependent, probabilistic, and noisy. Structure/function analyses and identification of its interaction partners suggest that Aire may impact transcription at several levels, including nucleosome displacement during elongation and transcript splicing or other aspects of maturation.
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