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2025 Articolo in rivista restricted access

Notch3 destabilizes regulatory T cells to drive autoimmune neuroinflammation in multiple sclerosis

Benamar, Mehdi ; Contini, Paola ; Schmitz-Abe, Klaus ; Lanzetta, Olga ; Getachew, Feven ; Bachelin, Corinne ; Leyva Castillo, Juan Manuel ; Wang, Muyun ; Oktelik, Fatma Betul ; Perrot, Océane ; Batamack, Yvann ; Arbag, Sena Nur ; Stephen-Victor, Emmanuel ; Harb, Hani ; Agrawal, Pankaj B ; Louapre, Céline ; Ivaldi, Federico ; Uccelli, Antonio ; Inglese, Matilde ; Angelini, Claudia ; Zujovic, Violetta ; De Palma, Raffaele ; Chatila, Talal A

The immune regulatory defects that promote neuroinflammation in multiple sclerosis (MS) remain unclear. We show that a specific regulatory T (Treg) cell subpopulation expressing Notch3 was increased in individuals with MS and in mice with experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE). Notch3+ Treg cells were induced by the gut microbiota via Toll-like receptor (TLR)-dependent mechanisms. They then translocated to the central nervous system (CNS) in EAE where they promoted disease severity. Notch3 interacted with delta-like ligand 1 (DLL1) on microglia to subvert Treg cells into T helper 17 (Th17) cells. Notch3 deletion in Treg cells prevented EAE onset by stabilizing Treg cells and by simultaneously promoting the expansion of a tissue-resident Treg cell population that expressed neuropeptide Y receptor 1 (NPY1R) and which suppressed pathogenic IFN-γ+ and GM-CSF+ T cells. Our studies thus identify altered Treg cell population dynamics as a fundamental pathogenic mechanism in autoimmune neuroinflammation.

Single cell analysis immune tolerance regulatory T cells Notch3 multiple sclerosis
2025 Articolo in rivista restricted access

Tbx1 stabilizes differentiation of the cardiopharyngeal mesoderm and drives morphogenesis in the pharyngeal apparatus

Lanzetta, Olga ; Bilio, Marchesa ; Liebig, Johannes ; Jechow, Katharina ; Wei Ten, Foo ; Ferrentino, Rosa ; Aurigemma, Ilaria ; Illingworth, Elizabeth ; Conrad, Christian ; Lukassen, Soeren ; Angelini, Claudia ; Baldini, Antonio

TBX1, a T-box transcription factor, is essential for pharyngeal apparatus development and marks cardiopharyngeal mesoderm (CPM) in various species. However, in mammals, we have an incomplete knowledge of the molecular pathways driving CPM diversification and of the role of TBX1 in this context. Using CPM-relevant in vitro differentiation of wild-type and Tbx1−/− mouse embryonic stem cells, we performed simultaneous single-nucleus RNA-seq and ATAC-seq at two stages, validated findings in embryos, and found that TBX1 loss affects gene expression and chromatin remodeling in a cell subpopulationspecific manner. TBX1 regulates chromatin accessibility and gene expression of distinct and evolutionarily conserved transcriptional modules for branchiomeric and cardiac development, and for tissue morphogenesis. Computational analyses predicted a feed-forward regulatory relationship between TBX1 and SIX factors. Notably, selected Tbx1 mutant CPM cell populations showed an altered differentiation trajectory, exhibiting activation of a mesothelial-like transcriptional program. We also observed cell death later in development. Thus, TBX1 is crucial for maintaining CPM transcriptional identity.

scRNAseq scATACseq Differentiation Tbx1