A feedback amplifier circuit with Notch and E2A orchestrates T-cell fate and suppresses the innate lymphoid cell lineages during thymic ontogeny.
Miyazaki K., Horie K., Watanabe H., Hidaka R., Hayashi R., Hayatsu N., Fujiwara K., Kuwata R., Uehata T., Ochi Y., Takenaka M., Kawaguchi RK., Ikuta K., Takeuchi O., Ogawa S., Hozumi K., Holländer GA., Kondoh G., Akiyama T., Miyazaki M.
External signals from the thymic microenvironment and the activities of lineage-specific transcription factors (TFs) instruct T-cell versus innate lymphoid cell (ILC) fates. However, mechanistic insights into how factors such as Notch1-Delta-like-4 (Dll4) signaling and E-protein TFs collaborate to establish T-cell identity remain rudimentary. Using multiple in vivo approaches and single-cell multiome analysis, we identified a feedback amplifier circuit that specifies fetal and adult T-cell fates. In early T progenitors (ETPs) in the fetal thymus, Notch signaling minimally lowered E-protein antagonist Id2 levels, and high Id2 abundance favored the differentiation of ETPs into ILCs. Conversely, in the adult thymus, Notch signaling markedly decreased Id2 abundance in ETPs, substantially elevating E-protein DNA binding and in turn promoting the activation of a T-cell lineage-specific gene expression program linked with V(D)J gene recombination and T-cell receptor signaling. Our findings indicate that, in the fetal versus the adult thymus, a simple feedback amplifier circuit dictated by Notch-mediated signals and Id2 abundance enforces T-cell identity and suppresses ILC development.