ABSTRACT
The NR4A family of orphan nuclear receptors (Nr4a1-3) plays redundant roles upstream of Foxp3 to establish and maintain Treg identity; deletion of multiple family members in the thymus results in Treg deficiency and a severe inflammatory disease. Consequently, it has been challenging to isolate the functions of this family in other immune cells. Here we take advantage of a competitive bone marrow chimera strategy, coupled with conditional genetic tools, to rescue Treg homeostasis and unmask such functions. Unexpectedly, chimeras harboring Nr4a1−/− Nr4a3−/− (DKO) bone marrow develop autoantibodies and a systemic inflammatory disease despite a replete Treg compartment of largely wild-type origin. This disease differs qualitatively from that seen with Treg-deficiency and is B cell-extrinsic. Negative selection of DKO thymocytes is profoundly impaired in a cell-intrinsic manner. Consistent with escape of self-reactive T cells into the periphery, DKO T cells with functional and phenotypic features of anergy accumulate in chimeric mice. Despite this, DKO T cells exhibit enhanced IL-2 production, implying a cell-intrinsic role for the NR4A family in peripheral T cell tolerance. These studies reveal roles for the NR4A family in multiple layered T cell tolerance mechanisms and demonstrate that each is essential to preserve immune homeostasis.
Competing Interest Statement
JZ serves on SAB for Walking Fish Therapeutics
Footnotes
Funding: The Uehara Memorial Foundation Research Fellowship (RH), NIGMS Molecular and Cellular Immunology Program T32AI00733432 (HVN), NIAMS R01 AR069520 (JZ), NIAID R01 AI148487 (JZ), Rheumatology Research Foundation (JZ) Conflict of interest: JZ is a scientific advisor for Walking Fish Therapeutics.