STAT1 drives the immune landscape of murine Toll-like receptor 9-induced liver inflammation
Amber De Visscher, Jarne Beliën, Eline Bernaerts, Marte Vandeput, Bert Malengier-Devlies, Fran Prenen, Hanne Meers, Liliana Sokol, Tania Mitera, Nele Berghmans, Seray Anak, Olivier Govaere, Philippe Van den Steen, Jochen Lamote, Niels Vandamme, Anna Bujko, Charlotte L. Scott

TL;DR
This study shows that STAT1 signaling is crucial in TLR9-induced liver inflammation and suggests JAK1/2 inhibitors as potential treatments for related diseases.
Contribution
The study reveals STAT1's role in TLR9-induced liver inflammation and proposes JAK1/2 inhibitors as therapeutic options.
Findings
STAT1-deficient mice are protected from TLR9-induced liver inflammation.
Type I and II IFN-induced STAT1 signaling promotes liver inflammation through specific immune cell populations.
JAK1/2 inhibitors may be effective in treating cytokine storm syndromes and inflammatory liver disorders.
Abstract
Persistent activation of Toll-like receptor 9 (TLR9) has been implicated in eliciting a cytokine storm syndrome, leading to systemic and hepatic inflammation in mice and humans. This study investigates the unexplored role of STAT1, a transcription factor in pathogen-driven immune responses, in mediating TLR9-induced liver inflammation. We compared clinical, histological, and laboratory characteristics (in total nine parameters) of TLR9-induced liver inflammation between wild-type (WT) mice and STAT1-deficient (Stat1-/-) mice (n = 3–31 mice/condition depending on the parameter measured) and explored their hepatic immune landscape using single-cell CITE-sequencing (total of 36,585 CD45+ liver cells from four to eight mice/condition). Findings were validated by flow cytometry, treatment with biologicals, ex vivo cell culture, and exploration of publicly available patient datasets.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCytokine Signaling Pathways and Interactions · Immune Response and Inflammation · Liver Diseases and Immunity
