IFNγ shapes macrophage inflammatory responses by STAT1 isoform-specific epigenetic and transcriptional mechanisms
Mojoyinola Joanna Akagha, Grigorios Georgolopoulos, David Martin, Katrin Meissl, Lena Amenitsch, Claus Vogl, Matthias Farlik, Nikolaus Fortelny, Florian Halbritter, Mathias Müller, Thomas Decker, Birgit Strobl

TL;DR
This study shows how different forms of a protein called STAT1 help control inflammation in immune cells through changes in gene regulation.
Contribution
The paper reveals isoform-specific roles of STAT1 in IFNγ-driven epigenetic regulation and macrophage conditioning.
Findings
STAT1 isoforms differentially modulate macrophage responses to LPS after IFNγ conditioning.
The STAT1β isoform lacks the ability to mediate IFNγ's repressive effect on LPS-induced transcription.
IFNγ amplifies inflammatory responses by repressing LPS-induced negative feedback loops.
Abstract
Interferon-γ (IFNγ) is a key cytokine that activates macrophages and is essential for the defence against intracellular pathogens. Beyond its immediate effects, IFNγ also shapes macrophages for subsequent encounters with pathogen-associated molecules by multiple mechanisms, including chromatin remodelling. Here, we employed integrated epigenomic and transcriptomic approaches utilizing primary macrophages from gene-modified mice to explore the role of STAT1 and its naturally occurring isoforms in these processes. Using ChIP-seq for histone modifications (H3K27ac and H3K4me1) and RNA-seq, we demonstrate that STAT1 isoforms differentially modulate macrophage responses to lipopolysaccharide (LPS) following IFNγ conditioning. We provide genetic evidence that STAT1 isoforms exhibit distinct capacities to mediated IFNγ-induced changes in H3K27 acetylation at promoter and enhancer regions,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCytokine Signaling Pathways and Interactions · Immune cells in cancer · interferon and immune responses
