[HTML][HTML] Exclusive temporal stimulation of IL-10 expression in LPS-stimulated mouse macrophages by cAMP inducers and type I interferons

O Ernst, Y Glucksam-Galnoy, B Bhatta… - Frontiers in …, 2019 - frontiersin.org
O Ernst, Y Glucksam-Galnoy, B Bhatta, M Athamna, I Ben-Dror, Y Glick, D Gerber, T Zor
Frontiers in immunology, 2019frontiersin.org
Expression of the key anti-inflammatory cytokine IL-10 in lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-
stimulated macrophages is mediated by a delayed autocrine/paracrine loop of type I
interferons (IFN) to ensure timely attenuation of inflammation. We have previously shown
that cAMP synergizes with early IL-10 expression by LPS, but is unable to amplify the late
type I IFN-dependent activity. We now examined the mechanism of this synergistic
transcription in mouse macrophages at the promoter level, and explored the crosstalk …
Expression of the key anti-inflammatory cytokine IL-10 in lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-stimulated macrophages is mediated by a delayed autocrine/paracrine loop of type I interferons (IFN) to ensure timely attenuation of inflammation. We have previously shown that cAMP synergizes with early IL-10 expression by LPS, but is unable to amplify the late type I IFN-dependent activity. We now examined the mechanism of this synergistic transcription in mouse macrophages at the promoter level, and explored the crosstalk between type I IFN signaling and cAMP, using the β-adrenergic receptor agonist, isoproterenol, as a cAMP inducer. We show that silencing of the type I IFN receptor enables isoproterenol to synergize with LPS also at the late phase, implying that autocrine type I IFN activity hinders synergistic augmentation of LPS-stimulated IL-10 expression by cAMP at the late phase. Furthermore, IL-10 expression in LPS-stimulated macrophages is exclusively stimulated by either IFNα or isoproterenol. We identified a set of two proximate and inter-dependent cAMP response element (CRE) sites that cooperatively regulate early IL-10 transcription in response to isoproterenol-stimulated CREB and that further synergize with a constitutive Sp1 site. At the late phase, up-regulation of Sp1 activity by LPS-stimulated type I IFN is correlated with loss of function of the CRE sites, suggesting a mechanism for the loss of synergism when LPS-stimulated macrophages switch to type I IFN-dependent IL-10 expression. This report delineates the molecular mechanism of cAMP-accelerated IL-10 transcription in LPS-stimulated murine macrophages that can limit inflammation at its onset.
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