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Park, Sung Ho
Laboratory of Molecular Immunology
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Type I interferons and the cytokine TNF cooperatively reprogram the macrophage epigenome to promote inflammatory activation

Author(s)
Park, Sung HoKang, KyuhoGiannopoulou, EugeniaQiao, YuKang, KeunsooKim, GeonhoPark-Min, Kyung-HyunIvashkiv, Lionel B.
Issued Date
2017-10
DOI
10.1038/ni.3818
URI
https://scholarworks.unist.ac.kr/handle/201301/26363
Fulltext
https://www.nature.com/articles/ni.3818
Citation
NATURE IMMUNOLOGY, v.18, no.10, pp.1104 - 1116
Abstract
Cross-regulation of Toll-like receptor (TLR) responses by cytokines is essential for effective host defense, avoidance of toxicity and homeostasis, but the underlying mechanisms are not well understood. Our comprehensive epigenomics approach to the analysis of human macrophages showed that the proinflammatory cytokines TNF and type I interferons induced transcriptional cascades that altered chromatin states to broadly reprogram responses induced by TLR4. TNF tolerized genes encoding inflammatory molecules to prevent toxicity while preserving the induction of genes encoding antiviral and metabolic molecules. Type I interferons potentiated the inflammatory function of TNF by priming chromatin to prevent the silencing of target genes of the transcription factor NF-kappa B that encode inflammatory molecules. The priming of chromatin enabled robust transcriptional responses to weak upstream signals. Similar chromatin regulation occurred in human diseases. Our findings reveal that signaling crosstalk between interferons and TNF is integrated at the level of chromatin to reprogram inflammatory responses, and identify previously unknown functions and mechanisms of action of these cytokines.
Publisher
NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
ISSN
1529-2908
Keyword
CELL IDENTITYCHROMATINENHANCERSPOLARIZATIONTRANSCRIPTION FACTORSENVIRONMENTTOLERANCELANDSCAPEENDOTOXINRESPONSES

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