Ezh2 controls skin tolerance through distinct mechanisms in different subsets of skin dendritic cells

Ezh2, a well-established epigenetic repressor, can down-regulate leukocyte inflammatory responses, but its role in cutaneous health remains elusive. Here we demonstrate that Ezh2 controls cutaneous tolerance by regulating Langerhans cell (LC) transmigration across the epidermal basement membrane dir...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Morita, Akimichi, Ginhoux, Florent, Loh, Jia Tong, Lim, Thomas Jun Feng, Ikumi, Kyoko, Matoba, Takuma, Janela, Baptiste, Gunawan, Merry, Toyama, Tatsuya, Bunjamin, Maegan, Ng, Lai Guan, Poidinger, Michael, Yamazaki, Sayuri, Lam, Kong-Peng, Su, I-hsin
Other Authors: School of Biological Sciences
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/85704
http://hdl.handle.net/10220/49842
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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Summary:Ezh2, a well-established epigenetic repressor, can down-regulate leukocyte inflammatory responses, but its role in cutaneous health remains elusive. Here we demonstrate that Ezh2 controls cutaneous tolerance by regulating Langerhans cell (LC) transmigration across the epidermal basement membrane directly via Talin1 methylation. Ezh2 deficiency impaired disassembly of adhesion structures in LCs, leading to their defective integrin-dependent emigration from the epidermis and failure in tolerance induction. Moreover, mobilization of Ezh2-deficient Langerin– dermal dendritic cells (dDCs) via high-dose treatment with a weak allergen restored tolerance, which is associated with an increased tolerogenic potential of Langerin– dDCs likely due to epigenetic de-repression of Aldh in the absence of Ezh2. Our data reveal novel roles for Ezh2 in governing LC- and dDC-mediated host protection against cutaneous allergen via distinct mechanisms.