STAT4-mediated transcriptional repression of the IL5 gene in human memory Th2 cells

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Abstract

Type I interferon (IFN-α/β) plays a critical role in suppressing viral replication by driving the transcription of hundreds of interferon-sensitive genes (ISGs). While many ISGs are transcriptionally activated by the ISGF3 complex, the significance of other signaling intermediates in IFN-α/β-mediated gene regulation remains elusive, particularly in rare cases of gene silencing. In human Th2 cells, IFN-α/β signaling suppressed IL5 and IL13 mRNA expression during recall responses to T-cell receptor (TCR) activation. This suppression occurred through a rapid reduction in the rate of nascent transcription, independent of de novo expression of ISGs. Further, IFN-α/β-mediated STAT4 activation was required for repressing the human IL5 gene, and disrupting STAT4 dimerization reversed this effect. This is the first demonstration of STAT4 acting as a transcriptional repressor in response to IFN-α/β signaling and highlights the unique activity of this cytokine to acutely block the expression of an inflammatory cytokine in human T cells.

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Gonzales-van Horn, S. R., Estrada, L. D., van Oers, N. S. C., & Farrar, J. D. (2016). STAT4-mediated transcriptional repression of the IL5 gene in human memory Th2 cells. European Journal of Immunology, 46(6), 1504–1510. https://doi.org/10.1002/eji.201546050

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