Abstract

ABSTRACTExcessive inflammation can cause tissue damage and autoimmunity, sometimes accompanied by severe morbidity or mortality. Numerous negative feedback mechanisms exist to prevent unchecked inflammation, but this restraint may come at the cost of suboptimal infection control. Regnase-1 (MCPIP1), a feedback regulator of IL-17 and LPS signaling, binds and degrades target mRNAs. Consequently, Reg1 deficiency exacerbates autoimmunity in multiple models. However, the role of Reg1 in bacterial immunity remains poorly defined. Here, we show that mice deficient in Reg1 are resistant to Klebsiella pneumoniae (KP). Reg1 deficiency did not accelerate bacterial eradication. Rather, Reg1-deficient alveolar macrophages had elevated Ifnb1 and enrichment of type I IFN genes. Blockade of IFNR during KP infection reversed disease improvement. Reg1 did not impact Ifnb1 stability directly, but Irf7 expression was affected. Thus, Reg1 suppresses type I IFN signaling restricting resistance to KP, suggesting that Reg1 could potentially be a target in severe bacterial infections.

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