RIG-I activation primes and trains innate antiviral immune memory

Maike S Adamson, Svetozar Nesic,Andreas Buness, Kübra Bayrak, Saskia Schmitz,Sofía Soler, Thomas Zillinger,Samira Marx,Silke Lambing, Katarzyna Andryka-Cegielski, Fawad Khan,Thais M. Schlee-Guimarães, Stephan Herberhold, Michele Proietti,Katarzyna Placek, Patrick Reading, Luca Cicin-Sain,Martin Schlee, Jasper van den Boorn,Evelyn Hartmann, Gunther Hartmann,Eva Bartok

biorxiv(2022)

引用 0|浏览10
暂无评分
摘要
Adaptive processes of the innate immune system, known as trained immunity (TI), are critical to human health and disease, yet they have not been systematically investigated downstream of antiviral sensing. Here, we elucidate the potential of the antiviral cytosolic RNA receptor retinoic acid-inducible gene I (RIG-I) to train, prime and tolerize the innate immune system. Using a specific RIG-I agonist, we observed that repetitive stimulation enhanced interferon-stimulated gene (ISG) and pro-inflammatory cytokine induction in human primary monocytes, epithelial cells and fibroblasts and afforded non-specific antiviral protection. RNA sequencing revealed broad, cell type-specific transcriptional changes, indicative of priming of ISGs and training of the NFκB pathway, without measurable tolerization, while ATAC sequencing in monocytes demonstrated chromatin remodeling and enhanced accessibility of key transcription factor-binding motifs such as STAT1. Moreover, while STAT1 signaling was critically required, it was not sufficient to recapitulate RIG-I induced TI. Altogether, our data demonstrate that RIG-I-mediated TI promotes an immunologically alert state with important implications for host defense and the application of RIG-I ligands in anti-infective and anti-tumoral therapies. One Sentence Summary RIG-I activation trains and primes innate immune response at the cellular level, affording non-specific immune protection by immune and non-immune cells.
更多
查看译文
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要