- Mowery, Cody T;
- Freimer, Jacob W;
- Chen, Zeyu;
- Casaní-Galdón, Salvador;
- Umhoefer, Jennifer M;
- Arce, Maya M;
- Gjoni, Ketrin;
- Daniel, Bence;
- Sandor, Katalin;
- Gowen, Benjamin G;
- Nguyen, Vinh;
- Simeonov, Dimitre R;
- Garrido, Christian M;
- Curie, Gemma L;
- Schmidt, Ralf;
- Steinhart, Zachary;
- Satpathy, Ansuman T;
- Pollard, Katherine S;
- Corn, Jacob E;
- Bernstein, Bradley E;
- Ye, Chun Jimmie;
- Marson, Alexander
Cis-regulatory elements (CREs) interact with trans regulators to orchestrate gene expression, but how transcriptional regulation is coordinated in multi-gene loci has not been experimentally defined. We sought to characterize the CREs controlling dynamic expression of the adjacent costimulatory genes CD28, CTLA4 and ICOS, encoding regulators of T cell-mediated immunity. Tiling CRISPR interference (CRISPRi) screens in primary human T cells, both conventional and regulatory subsets, uncovered gene-, cell subset- and stimulation-specific CREs. Integration with CRISPR knockout screens and assay for transposase-accessible chromatin with sequencing (ATAC-seq) profiling identified trans regulators influencing chromatin states at specific CRISPRi-responsive elements to control costimulatory gene expression. We then discovered a critical CCCTC-binding factor (CTCF) boundary that reinforces CRE interaction with CTLA4 while also preventing promiscuous activation of CD28. By systematically mapping CREs and associated trans regulators directly in primary human T cell subsets, this work overcomes longstanding experimental limitations to decode context-dependent gene regulatory programs in a complex, multi-gene locus critical to immune homeostasis.