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Dive into the research topics where Ivan Bilic is active.

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Featured researches published by Ivan Bilic.


Immunity | 2008

Instructive Role of the Transcription Factor E2A in Early B Lymphopoiesis and Germinal Center B Cell Development

Kyongrim Kwon; Caroline Hutter; Qiong Sun; Ivan Bilic; César Cobaleda; Stephen Malin; Meinrad Busslinger

The transcription factor E2A controls the initiation of B lymphopoiesis, which is arrested at the pre-pro-B cell stage in E2A-deficient mice. Here, we demonstrate by conditional mutagenesis that E2A is essential for the development of pro-B, pre-B, and immature B cells in the bone marrow. E2A is, however, dispensable for the generation of mature B cells and plasma cells in peripheral lymphoid organs. In contrast, germinal center B cell development is impaired in the absence of E2A despite normal AID expression and class-switch recombination. Molecular analysis revealed that E2A is required not only for initiating but also for maintaining the expression of Ebf1, Pax5, and the B cell gene program in pro-B cells. Notably, precocious Pax5 transcription from the Ikzf1 locus promotes pro-B cell development in E2A-deficient mice, demonstrating that ectopic Pax5 expression is sufficient to activate the B lymphoid transcription program in vivo in the absence of E2A.


The EMBO Journal | 2012

The B‐cell identity factor Pax5 regulates distinct transcriptional programmes in early and late B lymphopoiesis

Roger Revilla-i-Domingo; Ivan Bilic; Bojan Vilagos; Hiromi Tagoh; Anja Ebert; Ido Tamir; Leonie Smeenk; Johanna Trupke; Andreas Sommer; Markus Jaritz; Meinrad Busslinger

Pax5 controls the identity and development of B cells by repressing lineage‐inappropriate genes and activating B‐cell‐specific genes. Here, we used genome‐wide approaches to identify Pax5 target genes in pro‐B and mature B cells. In these cell types, Pax5 bound to 40% of the cis‐regulatory elements defined by mapping DNase I hypersensitive (DHS) sites, transcription start sites and histone modifications. Although Pax5 bound to 8000 target genes, it regulated only 4% of them in pro‐B and mature B cells by inducing enhancers at activated genes and eliminating DHS sites at repressed genes. Pax5‐regulated genes in pro‐B cells account for 23% of all expression changes occurring between common lymphoid progenitors and committed pro‐B cells, which identifies Pax5 as an important regulator of this developmental transition. Regulated Pax5 target genes minimally overlap in pro‐B and mature B cells, which reflects massive expression changes between these cell types. Hence, Pax5 controls B‐cell identity and function by regulating distinct target genes in early and late B lymphopoiesis.


Journal of Immunology | 2010

Conditional Deletion of Histone Deacetylase 1 in T Cells Leads to Enhanced Airway Inflammation and Increased Th2 Cytokine Production

Reinhard Grausenburger; Ivan Bilic; Nicole Boucheron; Gordin Zupkovitz; Lamia El-Housseiny; Roland Tschismarov; Yu Zhang; Martina Rembold; Martin Gaisberger; Arnulf Hartl; Michelle M. Epstein; Patrick Matthias; Christian Seiser; Wilfried Ellmeier

Chromatin modifications, such as reversible histone acetylation, play a key role in the regulation of T cell development and function. However, the role of individual histone deacetylases (HDACs) in T cells is less well understood. In this article, we show by conditional gene targeting that T cell-specific loss of HDAC1 led to an increased inflammatory response in an in vivo allergic airway inflammation model. Mice with HDAC1-deficient T cells displayed an increase in all critical parameters in this Th2-type asthma model, such as eosinophil recruitment into the lung, mucus hypersecretion, parenchymal lung inflammation, and enhanced airway resistance. This correlated with enhanced Th2 cytokine production in HDAC1-deficient T cells isolated from diseased mice. In vitro-polarized HDAC1-deficient Th2 cells showed a similar enhancement of IL-4 expression, which was evident already at day 3 of Th2 differentiation cultures and restricted to T cell subsets that underwent several rounds of cell divisions. HDAC1 was recruited to the Il4 gene locus in ex vivo isolated nonstimulated CD4+ T cells, indicating a direct control of the Il4 gene locus. Our data provide genetic evidence that HDAC1 is an essential HDAC that controls the magnitude of an inflammatory response by modulating cytokine expression in effector T cells.


Nature Immunology | 2010

The zinc-finger protein MAZR is part of the transcription factor network that controls the CD4 versus CD8 lineage fate of double-positive thymocytes

Shinya Sakaguchi; Matthias Hombauer; Ivan Bilic; Yoshinori Naoe; Alexandra Schebesta; Ichiro Taniuchi; Wilfried Ellmeier

The CD4 versus CD8 lineage specification of thymocytes is linked to coreceptor expression. The transcription factor MAZR has been identified as an important regulator of Cd8 expression. Here we show that variegated CD8 expression by loss of Cd8 enhancers was reverted in MAZR-deficient mice, which confirms that MAZR negatively regulates the Cd8 loci during the transition to the double-positive (DP) stage. Moreover, loss of MAZR led to partial redirection of major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I–restricted thymocytes into CD4+ helper-like T cells, which correlated with derepression of Th-POK, a central transcription factor for helper-lineage development. MAZR bound the silencer of the gene encoding Th-POK, which indicated direct regulation of this locus by MAZR. Thus, MAZR is part of the transcription factor network that regulates the CD8 lineage differentiation of DP thymocytes.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2012

Essential role of EBF1 in the generation and function of distinct mature B cell types

Bojan Vilagos; Mareike Hoffmann; Abdallah Souabni; Qiong Sun; Barbara Werner; Jasna Medvedovic; Ivan Bilic; Martina Minnich; Elin Axelsson; Markus Jaritz; Meinrad Busslinger

Gain- and loss-of-function analyses reveal that the transcription factor EBF1 is required for normal differentiation and function of marginal zone, B-1, follicular, and germinal center B cells in mice.


Journal of Immunology | 2013

Id2-Mediated Inhibition of E2A Represses Memory CD8+ T Cell Differentiation

Frederick Masson; Martina Minnich; Moshe Olshansky; Ivan Bilic; Adele M. Mount; Axel Kallies; Terence P. Speed; Meinrad Busslinger; Stephen L. Nutt; Gabrielle T. Belz

The transcription factor inhibitor of DNA binding (Id)2 modulates T cell fate decisions, but the molecular mechanism underpinning this regulation is unclear. In this study we show that loss of Id2 cripples effector differentiation and instead programs CD8+ T cells to adopt a memory fate with increased Eomesodermin and Tcf7 expression. We demonstrate that Id2 restrains CD8+ T cell memory differentiation by inhibiting E2A-mediated direct activation of Tcf7 and that Id2 expression level mirrors T cell memory recall capacity. As a result of the defective effector differentiation, Id2-deficient CD8+ T cells fail to induce sufficient Tbx21 expression to generate short-lived effector CD8+ T cells. Our findings reveal that the Id2/E2A axis orchestrates T cell differentiation through the induction or repression of downstream transcription factors essential for effector and memory T cell differentiation.


Journal of Immunology | 2005

Functional and Molecular Analysis of the Double-Positive Stage-Specific CD8 Enhancer E8III during Thymocyte Development

Nicholas Feik; Ivan Bilic; Johanna Tinhofer; Bernd Unger; Dan R. Littman; Wilfried Ellmeier

Several developmental stage-, subset-, and lineage-specific Cd8 cis-regulatory regions have been identified. These include the E8III enhancer, which directs expression in double-positive (DP) thymocytes, and E8II, which is active in DP cells and CD8+ T cells. Using a transgenic reporter expression assay, we identified a 285-bp core fragment of the E8III enhancer that retains activity in DP thymocytes. In vitro characterization of the core enhancer revealed five regulatory elements that are required for full enhancer activity, suggesting that multiple factors contribute to the developmental stage-specific activity. Furthermore, deletion of E8III in the mouse germline showed that this enhancer is required for nonvariegated expression of CD8 in DP thymocytes when E8II is also deleted. These results indicate that E8III is one of the cis-elements that contribute to the activation of the Cd8a and Cd8b gene complex during T cell development.


Nature Immunology | 2016

RASGRP1 deficiency causes immunodeficiency with impaired cytoskeletal dynamics

Elisabeth Salzer; Deniz Cagdas; Miroslav Hons; Emily M. Mace; Wojciech Garncarz; Özlem Yüce Petronczki; René Platzer; Laurène Pfajfer; Ivan Bilic; Sol A. Ban; Katharina L. Willmann; Malini Mukherjee; Verena Supper; Hsiang Ting Hsu; Pinaki P. Banerjee; Papiya Sinha; Fabienne McClanahan; Gerhard J. Zlabinger; Winfried F. Pickl; John G. Gribben; Hannes Stockinger; Keiryn L. Bennett; Johannes B. Huppa; Loïc Dupré; Ozden Sanal; Ulrich Jäger; Michael Sixt; Ilhan Tezcan; Jordan S. Orange; Kaan Boztug

RASGRP1 is an important guanine nucleotide exchange factor and activator of the RAS-MAPK pathway following T cell antigen receptor (TCR) signaling. The consequences of RASGRP1 mutations in humans are unknown. In a patient with recurrent bacterial and viral infections, born to healthy consanguineous parents, we used homozygosity mapping and exome sequencing to identify a biallelic stop-gain variant in RASGRP1. This variant segregated perfectly with the disease and has not been reported in genetic databases. RASGRP1 deficiency was associated in T cells and B cells with decreased phosphorylation of the extracellular-signal-regulated serine kinase ERK, which was restored following expression of wild-type RASGRP1. RASGRP1 deficiency also resulted in defective proliferation, activation and motility of T cells and B cells. RASGRP1-deficient natural killer (NK) cells exhibited impaired cytotoxicity with defective granule convergence and actin accumulation. Interaction proteomics identified the dynein light chain DYNLL1 as interacting with RASGRP1, which links RASGRP1 to cytoskeletal dynamics. RASGRP1-deficient cells showed decreased activation of the GTPase RhoA. Treatment with lenalidomide increased RhoA activity and reversed the migration and activation defects of RASGRP1-deficient lymphocytes.


Blood | 2013

Erythropoiesis and globin switching in compound Klf1::Bcl11a mutant mice

Fatemehsadat Esteghamat; Nynke Gillemans; Ivan Bilic; Emile van den Akker; Ileana Cantú; Teus van Gent; Ursula Klingmüller; Kirsten van Lom; Marieke von Lindern; Frank Grosveld; Thamar B. van Dijk; Meinrad Busslinger; Sjaak Philipsen

B-cell lymphoma 11A (BCL11A) downregulation in human primary adult erythroid progenitors results in elevated expression of fetal γ-globin. Recent reports showed that BCL11A expression is activated by KLF1, leading to γ-globin repression. To study regulation of erythropoiesis and globin expression by KLF1 and BCL11A in an in vivo model, we used mice carrying a human β-globin locus transgene with combinations of Klf1 knockout, Bcl11a floxed, and EpoR(Cre) knockin alleles. We found a higher percentage of reticulocytes in adult Klf1(wt/ko) mice and a mild compensated anemia in Bcl11a(cko/cko) mice. These phenotypes were more pronounced in compound Klf1(wt/ko)::Bcl11a(cko/cko) mice. Analysis of Klf1(wt/ko), Bcl11a(cko/cko), and Klf1(wt/ko)::Bcl11a(cko/cko) mutant embryos demonstrated increased expression of mouse embryonic globins during fetal development. Expression of human γ-globin remained high in Bcl11a(cko/cko) embryos during fetal development, and this was further augmented in Klf1(wt/ko)::Bcl11a(cko/cko) embryos. After birth, expression of human γ-globin and mouse embryonic globins decreased in Bcl11a(cko/cko) and Klf1(wt/ko)::Bcl11a(cko/cko) mice, but the levels remained much higher than those observed in control animals. Collectively, our data support an important role for the KLF1-BCL11A axis in erythroid maturation and developmental regulation of globin expression.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2016

Molecular functions of the transcription factors E2A and E2-2 in controlling germinal center B cell and plasma cell development

Miriam Wöhner; Hiromi Tagoh; Ivan Bilic; Markus Jaritz; Daniela Kostanova Poliakova; Maria Fischer; Meinrad Busslinger

Busslinger et al. showed that the transcription factors E2A and E2-2 control the expression of genes required for the development of GC B cells and plasma cells.

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Wilfried Ellmeier

Medical University of Vienna

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Meinrad Busslinger

Research Institute of Molecular Pathology

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Bernd Unger

Medical University of Vienna

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Alexandra Schebesta

Medical University of Vienna

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Markus Jaritz

Research Institute of Molecular Pathology

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Matthias Hombauer

Medical University of Vienna

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Shinya Sakaguchi

Medical University of Vienna

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Bojan Vilagos

Research Institute of Molecular Pathology

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Christian Seiser

Medical University of Vienna

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