Background: Human endosomal Toll-like receptors TLR7 and TLR8 recognize self and non-self RNA ligands, and are important mediators of innate immunity and autoimmune pathogenesis. TLR7 and TLR8 are, respectively, encoded by adjacent X-linked genes. We previously established that TLR7 evades X chromosome inactivation (XCI) in female immune cells. Whether TLR8 also evades XCI, however, has not yet been explored.
Method: In the current study, we used RNA fluorescence in situ hybridization (RNA FISH) to directly visualize, on a single-cell basis, primary transcripts of TLR7 and TLR8 relative to X chromosome territories in CD14+ monocytes and CD4+ T lymphocytes from women, Klinefelter syndrome (KS) men, and euploid men. To assign X chromosome territories in cells lacking robust expression of a XIST compartment, we designed probes specific for X-linked genes that do not escape XCI and therefore robustly label the active X chromosome. We also assessed whether XCI escape of TLR8 was associated with sexual dimorphism in TLR8 protein expression by western blot and flow cytometry.
Results: Using RNA FISH, we show that TLR8, like TLR7, evades XCI in immune cells, and that cells harboring simultaneously TLR7 and TLR8 transcript foci are more frequent in women and KS men than in euploid men, resulting in a sevenfold difference in frequency. This transcriptional bias was again observable when comparing the single X of XY males with the active X of cells from females or KS males. Interestingly, TLR8 protein expression was significantly higher in female mononuclear blood cells, including all monocyte subsets, than in male cells.
Conclusions: TLR8, mirroring TLR7, escapes XCI in human monocytes and CD4+ T cells. Co-dependent transcription from the active X chromosome and escape from XCI could both contribute to higher TLR8 protein abundance in female cells, which may have implications for the response to viruses and bacteria, and the risk of developing inflammatory and autoimmune diseases.
Keywords: Human monocytes and CD4+ T cells; Klinefelter syndrome; Toll-like receptor 7; Toll-like receptor 8; X chromosome inactivation escape.
Human endosomal Toll-like receptors TLR7 and TLR8, encoded by two adjacent X-linked genes, recognize self and non-self RNA ligands, and are important mediators of innate immunity and autoimmune pathogenesis. We previously reported that TLR7 evades X chromosome inactivation (XCI) in female immune cells, correlating with enhanced functional properties in B cells harboring biallelic expression of this gene. Here, we conducted a comprehensive single-cell resolution analysis of the transcriptional regulation of both TLR7 and TLR8, in CD14+ monocytes and CD4+ T lymphocytes. We unequivocally demonstrated that TLR8, like TLR7, escapes XCI in immune cells from female and Klinefelter syndrome males. When we analyzed TLR7 and TLR8 transcripts together, cells from women and KS men exhibited higher frequencies of cells co-transcribing the two genes. Surprisingly, these differences were attributable not only to the ability of TLR7 and TLR8 to be expressed on the Xi, but also to the joint transcriptional behavior of the TLR7–TLR8 gene pair on the active X chromosome specifically. This contrasted with a striking pattern of mutually exclusive transcription on the single X of euploid men. Corroborating our RNA FISH results, we found higher TLR8 protein expression in female than in male leukocytes, including all monocyte subpopulations. In summary, our data suggest that sex-biased co-regulation of the Toll-like receptor locus and XCI escape of TLR8 contribute to the sexual dimorphism in TLR8 expression, which may have important consequences for the functional make-up of monocyte and T cell populations.
© 2023. Society for Women's Health Research and BioMed Central Ltd.