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The nuclear receptor PPARγ controls progressive macrophage polarization as a ligand-insensitive epigenomic ratchet of transcriptional memory

Authors

  • B. Daniel
  • G. Nagy
  • Z. Czimmerer
  • A. Horvath
  • D.W. Hammers
  • I. Cuaranta-Monroy
  • S. Poliska
  • P. Tzerpos
  • Z. Kolostyak
  • T.T. Hays
  • A. Patsalos
  • R. Houtman
  • S. Sauer
  • J. Francois-Deleuze
  • F. Rastinejad
  • B.L. Balint
  • H.L. Sweeney
  • L. Nagy

Journal

  • Immunity

Citation

  • Immunity 49 (4): 615-626

Abstract

  • Macrophages polarize into distinct phenotypes in response to complex environmental cues. We found that the nuclear receptor PPARγ drove robust phenotypic changes in macrophages upon repeated stimulation with interleukin (IL)-4. The functions of PPARγ on macrophage polarization in this setting were independent of ligand binding. Ligand-insensitive PPARγ bound DNA and recruited the coactivator P300 and the architectural protein RAD21. This established a permissive chromatin environment that conferred transcriptional memory by facilitating the binding of the transcriptional regulator STAT6 and RNA polymerase II, leading to robust production of enhancer and mRNAs upon IL-4 re-stimulation. Ligand-insensitive PPARγ binding controlled the expression of an extracellular matrix remodeling-related gene network in macrophages. Expression of these genes increased during muscle regeneration in a mouse model of injury, and this increase coincided with the detection of IL-4 and PPARγ in the affected tissue. Thus, a predominantly ligand-insensitive PPARγ:RXR cistrome regulates progressive and/or reinforcing macrophage polarization.


DOI

doi:10.1016/j.immuni.2018.09.005