IRF5 promotes inflammatory macrophage polarization and TH1-TH17 responses

Thomas Krausgruber(Imperial College London), Katrina Blazek(Imperial College London), Tim Smallie(Imperial College London), Saba Alzabin(Imperial College London), Helen Lockstone(Centre for Human Genetics), Natasha Sahgal(Centre for Human Genetics), Tracy Hussell(Imperial College London), Marc Feldmann(Imperial College London), Irina A. Udalova(Imperial College London)
Nature Immunology
January 16, 2011
Cited by 1,272Open Access
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Abstract

Macrophages are functionally highly plastic, but the transcriptional control of this process is only partially understood. Udalova and colleagues demonstrate that the transcription factor IRF5 controls the plasticity of M1 macrophages in both mice and humans. Polymorphisms in the gene encoding the transcription factor IRF5 that lead to higher mRNA expression are associated with many autoimmune diseases. Here we show that IRF5 expression in macrophages was reversibly induced by inflammatory stimuli and contributed to the plasticity of macrophage polarization. High expression of IRF5 was characteristic of M1 macrophages, in which it directly activated transcription of the genes encoding interleukin 12 subunit p40 (IL-12p40), IL-12p35 and IL-23p19 and repressed the gene encoding IL-10. Consequently, those macrophages set up the environment for a potent T helper type 1 (TH1)-TH17 response. Global gene expression analysis demonstrated that exogenous IRF5 upregulated or downregulated expression of established phenotypic markers of M1 or M2 macrophages, respectively. Our data suggest a critical role for IRF5 in M1 macrophage polarization and define a previously unknown function for IRF5 as a transcriptional repressor.


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