Circadian control of innate immunity in macrophages by miR-155 targeting <i>Bmal1</i>

Annie M. Curtis(Trinity College Dublin), Caio T. Fagundes(Trinity College Dublin), Guangrui Yang(Translational Therapeutics (United States)), Eva M. Pålsson‐McDermott(Trinity College Dublin), Paulina Wochal(Trinity College Dublin), Anne F. McGettrick(Trinity College Dublin), Niamh H. Foley(Trinity College Dublin), James O. Early(Trinity College Dublin), Lihong Chen(Translational Therapeutics (United States)), Hanrui Zhang(Cardiovascular Institute of the South), Chenyi Xue(Cardiovascular Institute of the South), Sarah S. Geiger(Trinity College Dublin), Karsten Hokamp(Trinity College Dublin), Muredach P. Reilly(Cardiovascular Institute of the South), Andrew N. Coogan(National University of Ireland, Maynooth), Elena Vigorito(Babraham Institute), Garret A. FitzGerald(Translational Therapeutics (United States)), Luke O'neill(Trinity College Dublin)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
May 20, 2015
Cited by 302Open Access
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Abstract

The response to an innate immune challenge is conditioned by the time of day, but the molecular basis for this remains unclear. In myeloid cells, there is a temporal regulation to induction by lipopolysaccharide (LPS) of the proinflammatory microRNA miR-155 that correlates inversely with levels of BMAL1. BMAL1 in the myeloid lineage inhibits activation of NF-κB and miR-155 induction and protects mice from LPS-induced sepsis. Bmal1 has two miR-155-binding sites in its 3'-UTR, and, in response to LPS, miR-155 binds to these two target sites, leading to suppression of Bmal1 mRNA and protein in mice and humans. miR-155 deletion perturbs circadian function, gives rise to a shorter circadian day, and ablates the circadian effect on cytokine responses to LPS. Thus, the molecular clock controls miR-155 induction that can repress BMAL1 directly. This leads to an innate immune response that is variably responsive to challenges across the circadian day.


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