First Author | Haque N | Year | 2018 |
Journal | Nat Commun | Volume | 9 |
Issue | 1 | Pages | 1145 |
PubMed ID | 29559679 | Mgi Jnum | J:260739 |
Mgi Id | MGI:6149440 | Doi | 10.1038/s41467-018-03326-5 |
Citation | Haque N, et al. (2018) ZFR coordinates crosstalk between RNA decay and transcription in innate immunity. Nat Commun 9(1):1145 |
abstractText | Control of type I interferon production is crucial to combat infection while preventing deleterious inflammatory responses, but the extent of the contribution of post-transcriptional mechanisms to innate immune regulation is unclear. Here, we show that human zinc finger RNA-binding protein (ZFR) represses the interferon response by regulating alternative pre-mRNA splicing. ZFR expression is tightly controlled during macrophage development; monocytes express truncated ZFR isoforms, while macrophages induce full-length ZFR to modulate macrophage-specific alternative splicing. Interferon-stimulated genes are constitutively activated by ZFR depletion, and immunostimulation results in hyper-induction of interferon beta (IFNbeta/IFNB1). Through whole-genome analyses, we show that ZFR controls interferon signaling by preventing aberrant splicing and nonsense-mediated decay of histone variant macroH2A1/H2AFY mRNAs. Together, our data suggest that regulation of ZFR in macrophage differentiation guards against aberrant interferon responses and reveal a network of mRNA processing and decay that shapes the transcriptional response to infection. |