In T cells, chromatin structure can be dependent on cell fate, cell activation, or both. This is well illustrated in the case of the Th2 cytokine cluster, containing the Th2 cytokines IL-4, IL-5 and IL-13 [
1,
2]. The Th2 cytokines are exclusively expressed in Th cells that have differentiated into the Th2 lineage and only upon T cell activation. DNase I hypersensitivity site (DHS) mapping of the cytokine loci from different Th subsets revealed dramatic changes in chromatin accessibility across the locus in Th2 cells compared to other Th lineages and undifferentiated Th precursors (Thps); typically, DHS are nucleosome-free regions created by chromatin remodeling proteins directed by the binding of transcription factors [
2,
3]. Many of the DHS were subsequently determined both genetically and biochemically to be enhancer and silencer elements important to Th2 cytokine expression and were marked with lineage-specific changes in histone modifications [
2,
3]. Although changes in nuclease accessibility across cytokine loci in response to differentiation and activation signals have been well documented, less is known about to the specific enzymes responsible for these changes [
4].
IL-10 was originally described as a Th2-specific cytokine, and the IL-10 gene is located on a different chromosome from the Th2 cytokine gene cluster [
5]. Like the Th2 cytokines, IL-10 expression in Th2 cells is accompanied by changes in the accessibility in the IL-10 locus directed by both lineage and activation-specific signals [
6-
8]. More recently the expression of IL-10 has been shown to be less restricted and more plastic than the classical Th2 cytokines. Both Th1 and Th17 cells can express IL-10 under specific conditions, while the newly described Th9 subset produces high levels of IL-10 along with IL-9 [
9-
11]. Biologically, IL-10 exhibits strong immunosuppressive effects and serves to attenuate immune responses. This is illustrated in the development of profound inflammatory bowel disease and exaggerated immune responses in IL-10-deficient mice [
12]. Indeed, some Treg cell populations, critical for the negative regulation of immune responses, mediate their activity through IL-10 expression [
13,
14]. A number of studies have linked genetic variants at the IL-10 gene to human disease [
15-
18].
ATP-dependent remodeling enzymes contain SWI2/SNF2-like ATPase subunits, and these ATPases couple the hydrolysis of ATP to changes in chromatin structure. SWI/SNF, Mi2, ISWI, and other ATP-dependent remodeling enzymes are classified into subfamilies based upon homology of the ATPase subunit [
4,
19,
20]. These remodeling enzymes appear to both activate and repress gene expression [
4,
21-
25]. SWI/SNF complexes are arguably the best-characterized ATP-dependent remodeling enzymes in T lymphocytes, with demonstrated functions in both early T cell development and T cell effector function [
4,
26]. Mammalian SWI/SNF complexes contain one copy of either the BRG1 or Brm ATPase, and approximately 10 additional accessory subunits to form complexes that are generally over a megadalton in size. Two versions of SWI/SNF complex, BAF and PBAF, have been described, based on subunit composition [
25,
27-
32], as well as other complexes specific to ES cells and neurons [
33,
34]. For example, BAF complexes contain either the BRG1 or Brm ATPase, and either BAF250a or BAF250b. PBAF complexes contain BAF180, BAF200 and the BRG1 ATPase but not Brm. Importantly, BAF and PBAF complexes appear to regulate different target genes [
29,
31].
Previous we identified BAF250-containing BAF complexes as important chromatin remodelers of cytokine loci in T cells [
24,
35] and, in ES cells, regulators of pluripotency and self-renewal [
36,
37]. BAF complexes have established roles in cell cycle [
38] and tumorigenesis [
39]. PBAF complexes are known to be important in coronary development [
40,
41]. However, a role for PBAF complexes in T cell differentiation and effector function has not been explored. The PBAF specific SWI/SNF component, BAF180 or polybromo (Pbrm1), appears to direct the regulation of a unique set of target genes [
42]. BAF180-deficient mice have defects in cardiac development that include the specific misregulation of retinoic acid-induced genes [
41]. BAF180 also plays an important role in the regulation of the cell cycle due, at least in part, to its ability to activate the transcription of the cell cycle regulator p21 [
43,
44]. BAF180 mutations have been identified in breast and renal cancers suggesting BAF180 is a tumor suppressor gene [
44,
45]. Mutation of another PBAF component, BAF200/Arid2, is found in hepatocellular carcinoma [
46]. The BAF180 protein includes an HMG DNA binding domain, two bromo-adjacent homology domains involved in protein-protein interactions and an array of six tandem bromodomains shown to bind to specific acetylated histone residues [
42]. Recruitment of BAF180 to its specific gene targets has been suggested to involve interactions with other proteins, including transcription factors, and the recognition of specific histone signatures.
In this study we examine the role of BAF180-containing PBAF complexes in CD4+ T cells. Using cells from mice conditionally deleted for BAF180 in T cells, we found that overall thymus and peripheral T cell development was intact. Additionally, the ex-vivo differentiation of CD4 T helper cells into different effector fates was not absolutely dependent on BAF180. However, BAF180 appeared to function as a repressor of the immunoregulatory cytokine, IL-10, in Th2 cells. BAF180 bound directly to regulatory elements in the Il-10 locus but was replaced by BAF250-containing BAF complexes in the absence of BAF180, resulting in increased histone acetylation and CBP recruitment to the IL-10 locus. These results suggest that the differential recruitment of different SWI/SNF subtypes (BAF and PBAF) can have direct consequences on gene transcription and cell fate in T cells.