A splice of life: the discovery, function, and clinical implications of FOXP3 isoforms in autoimmune disease

Author:

Weinstein Kristin N12,Domeier Phillip P1ORCID,Ziegler Steven F1

Affiliation:

1. Center for Fundamental Immunology, Benaroya Research Institute , Seattle, WA, 98101 , USA

2. Department of Immunology, University of Washington , Seattle, WA , USA

Abstract

Abstract Regulatory T cells (Tregs) are a specialized subset of CD4+ T cells essential for the maintenance of immune homeostasis and prevention of autoimmunity. Treg lineage and functions are programmed by the X-chromosome encoded transcription factor forkhead box P3 (FOXP3). In humans, multiple FOXP3 isoforms are generated through alternative splicing. A full-length isoform containing all coding exons (FOXP3-FL) and a version lacking the second exon (FOXP3-ΔE2) are the predominant FOXP3 isoforms. Additionally, there are two minor isoforms lacking either exon 7 (FOXP3-ΔE7) and both exons 2 and 7 (FOXP3-ΔE2ΔE7). Although healthy humans express approximately equal levels of the FOXP3-FL and FOXP3-ΔE2 isoforms, sole expression of FOXP3-ΔE2 results in the development of a systemic autoimmune disease that resembles immune dysregulation, polyendocrinopathy, enteropathy, X-linked (IPEX) syndrome. These clinical observations strongly suggest functional defects in suppression by Tregs programmed by the FOXP3-ΔE2 isoform. Work from the past two decades has provided phenotypic and functional evidence of differences between Tregs programmed by the FOXP3-FL, FOXP3-ΔE2, and FOXP3-ΔE7 isoforms. In this review, we discuss the discovery of the FOXP3 isoforms, differences in the phenotype and function of Tregs programmed by different FOXP3 isoforms, and the role that these isoforms are known to play in autoimmunity.

Funder

National Institutes of Allergy and Infectious Disease

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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