miR‐132 suppresses transcription of ribosomal proteins to promote protective Th1 immunity

  • Hewitson J
  • Shah K
  • Brown N
  • et al.
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Abstract

© 2019 The Authors Determining the mechanisms that distinguish protective immunity from pathological chronic inflammation remains a fundamental challenge. miR-132 has been shown to play largely immunoregulatory roles in immunity; however, its role in CD4 + T cell function is poorly understood. Here, we show that CD4 + T cells express high levels of miR-132 and that T cell activation leads to miR-132 up-regulation. The transcriptomic hallmark of splenic CD4 + T cells lacking the miR-132/212 cluster during chronic infection is an increase in mRNA levels of ribosomal protein (RP) genes. BTAF1, a co-factor of B-TFIID and novel miR-132/212-3p target, and p300 contribute towards miR-132/212-mediated regulation of RP transcription. Following infection with Leishmania donovani, miR-132 −/− CD4 + T cells display enhanced expression of IL-10 and decreased IFNγ. This is associated with reduced hepatosplenomegaly and enhanced pathogen load. The enhanced IL-10 expression in miR-132 −/− Th1 cells is recapitulated in vitro following treatment with phenylephrine, a drug reported to promote ribosome synthesis. Our results uncover that miR-132/212-mediated regulation of RP expression is critical for optimal CD4 + T cell activation and protective immunity against pathogens.

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Hewitson, J. P., Shah, K. M., Brown, N., Grevitt, P., Hain, S., Newling, K., … Lagos, D. (2019). miR‐132 suppresses transcription of ribosomal proteins to promote protective Th1 immunity. EMBO Reports, 20(4). https://doi.org/10.15252/embr.201846620

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