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Publication : miR-451 regulates dendritic cell cytokine responses to influenza infection.

First Author  Rosenberger CM Year  2012
Journal  J Immunol Volume  189
Issue  12 Pages  5965-75
PubMed ID  23169590 Mgi Jnum  J:190847
Mgi Id  MGI:5449789 Doi  10.4049/jimmunol.1201437
Citation  Rosenberger CM, et al. (2012) miR-451 Regulates Dendritic Cell Cytokine Responses to Influenza Infection. J Immunol 189(12):5965-75
abstractText  MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are important posttranscriptional regulators in immune cells, but how viral infection regulates miRNA expression to shape dendritic cell (DC) responses has not been well characterized. We identified 20 miRNAs that were differentially expressed in primary murine DCs in response to the dsRNA agonist polyinosinic-polycytidylic acid, a subset of which were modestly regulated by influenza infection. miR-451 was unique because it was induced more strongly in primary splenic and lung DCs by live viral infection than by purified agonists of pattern recognition receptors. We determined that miR-451 regulates a subset of proinflammatory cytokine responses. Three types of primary DCs treated with antisense RNA antagomirs directed against miR-451 secreted elevated levels of IL-6, TNF, CCL5/RANTES, and CCL3/MIP1alpha, and these results were confirmed using miR-451(null) cells. miR-451 negatively regulates YWHAZ/14-3-3zeta protein levels in various cell types, and we measured a similar inhibition of YWHAZ levels in DCs. It is known that YWHAZ can control the activity of two negative regulators of cytokine production: FOXO3, which is an inhibitory transcription factor, and ZFP36/Tristetraprolin, which binds to AU-rich elements within 3'-untranslated regions to destabilize cytokine mRNAs. Inhibition of miR-451 expression correlated with increased YWHAZ protein expression and decreased ZFP36 expression, providing a possible mechanism for the elevated secretion of IL-6, TNF, CCL5/RANTES, and CCL3/MIP1alpha. miR-451 levels are themselves increased by IL-6 and type I IFN, potentially forming a regulatory loop. These data suggest that viral infection specifically induces a miRNA that directs a negative regulatory cascade to tune DC cytokine production.
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