- Khan, Imran;
- Cortez, Jessica;
- Fan, Una;
- Metzger, Todd;
- Greer, Alexandra;
- Fasano, Kayla;
- Martinez-Llordella, Marc;
- Pollack, Joshua;
- Erle, David;
- Anderson, Mark;
- Waterfield, Michael;
- Su, Maureen
The maintenance of immunological tolerance requires the deletion of self-reactive T cells in the thymus. The expression of genes encoding tissue-specific antigens (TSAs) by thymic epithelial cells is critical for this process and depends on activity of the transcriptional regulator Aire; however, the molecular mechanisms Aire uses to target loci encoding TSAs are unknown. Here we identified two Aire-interacting proteins known to be involved in gene repression, ATF7ip and MBD1, that were required for Aires targeting of loci encoding TSAs. Moreover, Mbd1(-/-) mice developed pathological autoimmunity and had a defect in Aire-dependent thymic expression of genes encoding TSAs, which underscores the importance of Aires interaction with the ATF7ip-MBD1 protein complex in maintaining central tolerance.