Abstract

SUMMARYActivation of the TLR4 signaling pathway by lipopoly-saccharide (LPS) leads to induction of both inflammatory and interferon-stimulated genes, but the mechanisms through which these coordinately activated transcriptional programs are balanced to promote an optimal innate immune response remain poorly understood. In a genome-wide small interfering RNA (siRNA) screen of the LPS-induced tumor necrosis factor α (TNF-α) response in macrophages, we identify the interferon-stimulated protein IFIT1 as a negative regulator of the inflammatory gene program. Transcriptional profiling further identifies a positive regulatory role for IFIT1 in type I interferon expression, implicating IFIT1 as a reciprocal modulator of LPS-induced gene classes. We demonstrate that these effects of IFIT1 are mediated through modulation of a Sin3A-HDAC2 transcriptional regulatory complex at LPS-induced gene loci. Beyond the well-studied role of cytosolic IFIT1 in restricting viral replication, our data demonstrate a function for nuclear IFIT1 in differential transcriptional regulation of separate branches of the LPS-induced gene program.

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