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Inhibition of IRF4 in dendritic cells by PRR-independent and -dependent signals inhibit Th2 and promote Th17 responses.

Citation
Lee, J., et al. “Inhibition Of Irf4 In Dendritic Cells By Prr-Independent And -Dependent Signals Inhibit Th2 And Promote Th17 Responses.”. Elife.
Center UCSD-UCLA
Author Jihyung Lee, Junyan Zhang, Young-Jun Chung, Jun Hwan Kim, Chae Min Kook, José M González-Navajas, David S Herdman, Bernd Nürnberg, Paul A Insel, Maripat Corr, Ji-Hun Mo, Ailin Tao, Kei Yasuda, Ian R Rifkin, David H Broide, Roger Sciammas, Nicholas Jg Webster, Eyal Raz
Keywords IRF4, PRR, Th17, Th2, cAMP, Dendritic cells, immunology, inflammation, mouse
Abstract

Cyclic AMP (cAMP) is involved in many biological processes but little is known regarding its role in shaping immunity. Here we show that cAMP-PKA-CREB signaling (a pattern recognition receptor [PRR]-independent mechanism) regulates conventional type-2 Dendritic Cells (cDC2s) in mice and reprograms their Th17-inducing properties via repression of IRF4 and KLF4, transcription factors essential for cDC2-mediated Th2 induction. In mice, genetic loss of IRF4 phenocopies the effects of cAMP on Th17 induction and restoration of IRF4 prevents the cAMP effect. Moreover, curdlan, a PRR-dependent microbial product, activates CREB and represses IRF4 and KLF4, resulting in a pro-Th17 phenotype of cDC2s. These in vitro and in vivo results define a novel signaling pathway by which cDC2s display plasticity and provide a new molecular basis for the classification of novel cDC2 and cDC17 subsets. The findings also reveal that repressing IRF4 and KLF4 pathway can be harnessed for immuno-regulation.

Year of Publication
2020
Journal
eLife
Volume
9
Date Published
02/2020
ISSN Number
2050-084X
DOI
10.7554/eLife.49416
Alternate Journal
Elife
PMID
32014112
PMCID
PMC7000221
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