Publication date: 16 January 2018
Source:Immunity, Volume 48, Issue 1
Author(s): Zsolt Czimmerer, Bence Daniel, Attila Horvath, Dominik Rückerl, Gergely Nagy, Mate Kiss, Matthew Peloquin, Marietta M. Budai, Ixchelt Cuaranta-Monroy, Zoltan Simandi, Laszlo Steiner, Bela Nagy, Szilard Poliska, Csaba Banko, Zsolt Bacso, Ira G. Schulman, Sascha Sauer, Jean-Francois Deleuze, Judith E. Allen, Szilvia Benko, Laszlo Nagy
The molecular basis of signal-dependent transcriptional activation has been extensively studied in macrophage polarization, but our understanding remains limited regarding the molecular determinants of repression. Here we show that IL-4-activated STAT6 transcription factor is required for the direct transcriptional repression of a large number of genes during in vitro and in vivo alternative macrophage polarization. Repression results in decreased lineage-determining transcription factor, p300, and RNA polymerase II binding followed by reduced enhancer RNA expression, H3K27 acetylation, and chromatin accessibility. The repressor function of STAT6 is HDAC3 dependent on a subset of IL-4-repressed genes. In addition, STAT6-repressed enhancers show extensive overlap with the NF-κB p65 cistrome and exhibit decreased responsiveness to lipopolysaccharide after IL-4 stimulus on a subset of genes. As a consequence, macrophages exhibit diminished inflammasome activation, decreased IL-1β production, and pyroptosis. Thus, the IL-4-STAT6 signaling pathway establishes an alternative polarization-specific epigenenomic signature resulting in dampened macrophage responsiveness to inflammatory stimuli.
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Teaser
The molecular bases of repressive transcriptional mechanisms contributing to macrophage polarization are not well understood. Czimmerer et al. show that in alternatively polarized macrophages, IL-4-activated STAT6 represses a large set of enhancers modulating the transcriptional program. STAT6-repressed enhancers are characterized by reduced chromatin accessibility, eRNA expression, LDTF, and p300 binding. IL-4-STAT6-mediated repression limits the inflammatory responsiveness including inflammasome activation, IL-1β production, and pyroptosis. Thus, the IL4-STAT6 pathway establishes an epigenomic signature to selectively repress the macrophage inflammation program.http://ift.tt/2CfA27h
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