Abstract

The activation of several transcription factors is required for the elimination of infectious pathogens via the innate immune response. The transcription factors NF-κB, AP-1, and STAT play major roles in the synthesis of immune effector molecules during innate immune responses. However, the fact that these immune responses can have cytotoxic effects requires their tight regulation to achieve restricted and transient activation, and mis-regulation of the damping process has pathological consequences. Here we show that AP-1 and STAT are themselves the major inhibitors responsible for damping NF-κB–mediated transcriptional activation during the innate immune response in Drosophila. As the levels of dAP-1 and Stat92E increase due to continuous immune signaling, they play a repressive role by forming a repressosome complex with the Drosophila HMG protein, Dsp1. The dAP-1–, Stat92E-, and Dsp1-containing complexes replace Relish at the promoters of diverse immune effector genes by binding to evolutionarily conserved cis-elements, and they recruit histone deacetylase to inhibit transcription. Reduction by mutation of dAP-1, Stat92E, or Dsp1 results in hyperactivation of Relish target genes and reduces the viability of bacterially infected flies despite more efficient pathogen clearance. These defects are rescued by reducing the Relish copy number, thus confirming that mis-regulation of Relish, not inadequate activation of dAP-1, Stat92E, or Dsp1 target genes, is responsible for the reduced survival of the mutants. We conclude that an inhibitory effect of AP-1 and STAT on NF-κB is required for properly balanced immune responses and appears to be evolutionarily conserved.

Highlights

  • The innate immune response triggered by pathogen infection activates signal transduction pathways and elicits diverse humoral and cellular responses [1,2]

  • NF-jB–dependent Fas transcription is down-regulated by the suppressive action of c-Jun and STAT3 in human melanomaderived cell lines [16], and NF-jB bound to the Il6 and Il12b promoters is gradually replaced by ATF3, which interacts with AP-1 and STAT [17]

  • We found that two transcription factors, dAP-1 and Stat92E, which are activated by LPS/PGNinduced signal transduction pathways, form a repressosome complex together with the Drosophila HMG protein, Dsp1 and histone deacetylase, and this inhibits transcription of diverse immune effector genes activated by Relish

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Summary

Introduction

The innate immune response triggered by pathogen infection activates signal transduction pathways and elicits diverse humoral and cellular responses [1,2] This response requires the activation of several transcription factors to remodel the gene expression pattern of cells [3]. NF-jB–dependent Fas transcription is down-regulated by the suppressive action of c-Jun and STAT3 in human melanomaderived cell lines [16], and NF-jB bound to the Il6 and Il12b promoters is gradually replaced by ATF3, which interacts with AP-1 and STAT [17] These interactions play key roles in the proper maintenance and termination of immune responses. The inhibitory effect of this repressosome complex on NF-jB plays an important role in maintaining properly

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