Posttranslational modifications (PTMs) of transcription regulatory proteins allow the integration of various signaling and environmental cues into highly dynamic and controlled responses, thereby achieving coordinated gene expression programs essential for cell proliferation or differentiation.The transcription factor BCL11B/CTIP2 was independently isolated as an interacting partner of chicken ovalbumin upstream promoter transcription factor (COUP-TF) in neurons and as a tumor suppressor gene in mouse models of gamma ray-induced thymic lymphomas (1-3). Besides its expression in the central nervous system (CNS), BCL11B was shown to be widely expressed in all T-cell subsets, starting from the double-negative stage 2 (DN2 stage) and to be involved in various aspects of development, function, and survival of T cells (4). Indeed, BCL11B is a focal point essential for several checkpoints involved in T-cell commitment in early progenitors, selection at the DN2 stage, and differentiation of peripheral T cells (5-9). Furthermore, monoallelic BCL11B deletions or missense mutations have been identified in the major molecular subtypes of T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (10). Therefore, these observations together with the occurrence of deletions and mutations in gamma ray-induced thymomas in mice identify BCL11B as a haploinsufficient tumor suppressor gene (11).BCL11B is essential for T-cell development and is considered a "guardian of T cell fate" (12). Its closely related paralog BCL11A is essential for normal lymphopoiesis and hemoglobin switching during erythroid differentiation (13-15). Thus, these two transcription factors appear to be key regulators of fundamental differentiation programs during normal hematopoiesis.BCL11B represses transcription of its target genes through interaction with several chromatin remodelling complexes and notably recruits NuRD complexes (nuclear remodeling and deacetylation complexes) via interaction with MTA1 and MTA2 (4,11,[16][17][18]. Although originally characterized as a sequence-specific transcriptional repressor, BCL11B also behaves as a context-dependent transcriptional activator of the IL-2 and Cot kinase genes in CD4 ϩ T-cell activation (19, 20). This dual behavior of BCL11B as a transcriptional repressor and activator is not fully understood but clearly relies on a dynamic cross talk between BCL11B PTMs. Indeed, mass spectrometry analyses of thymocytes isolated from 4-to 8-week-old mice and stimulated with a mixture of phorbol ester and calcium ionophore used as an in vitro model mimicking T-cell receptor (TCR) activation identified several mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) phosphorylation sites of BCL11B and confirmed its