| Literature DB >> 26257737 |
Abstract
Monocytes and macrophages provide the first line of defense against pathogens. They also initiate acquired immunity by processing and presenting antigens and provide the downstream effector functions. Analysis of large gene expression datasets from multiple cells and tissues reveals sets of genes that are co-regulated with the transcription factors that regulate them. In macrophages, the gene clusters include lineage-specific genes, interferon-responsive genes, early inflammatory genes, and genes required for endocytosis and lysosome function. Macrophages enter tissues and alter their function to deal with a wide range of challenges related to development and organogenesis, tissue injury, malignancy, sterile, or pathogenic inflammatory stimuli. These stimuli alter the gene expression to produce "activated macrophages" that are better equipped to eliminate the cause of their influx and to restore homeostasis. Activation or polarization states of macrophages have been classified as "classical" and "alternative" or M1 and M2. These proposed states of cells are not supported by large-scale transcriptomic data, including macrophage-associated signatures from large cancer tissue datasets, where the supposed markers do not correlate with other. Individual macrophage cells differ markedly from each other, and change their functions in response to doses and combinations of agonists and time. The most studied macrophage activation response is the transcriptional cascade initiated by the TLR4 agonist lipopolysaccharide. This response is reviewed herein. The network topology is conserved across species, but genes within the transcriptional network evolve rapidly and differ between mouse and human. There is also considerable divergence in the sets of target genes between mouse strains, between individuals, and in other species such as pigs. The deluge of complex information related to macrophage activation can be accessed with new analytical tools and new databases that provide access for the non-expert.Entities:
Keywords: activation; colony-stimulating factor; lipopolysaccharide; macrophage; transcriptomics
Year: 2015 PMID: 26257737 PMCID: PMC4510422 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2015.00370
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1Transcriptional regulation of . The FANTOM5 analysis across hundreds of cells and tissues revealed the existence of multiple transcription start site (TSS) clusters in the vicinity of the SERPINA1 gene, as well as at least six enhancers in the genomic facility. At top left, (A) summarizes the fact that existing annotated upstream TSS in GenCode contributes only 20% of the TSS detected across the entire dataset. The majority of transcripts derive from two “intragenic” regions. The expanded genomic view above links the TSS to the expression profile. Note that the most abundant TSS, p1@serpinA1, was detected most highly in liver and in primary hepatocyte libraries, and much less in the relatively de-differentiated HepG2 cells. The second most abundant TSS, p3@serpinA1, was constitutively active in granulocytes. At top right, we see that three of the distal promoters were induced by LPS in human monocyte-derived macrophages, starting around 3–4 h after stimulation. The lower part of the panel (B) shows the location, and the time course of induction, of four separate enhancers, upstream, downstream, and within the SERPINA1 gene. (C) shows a close-up view of the distal TSS region on the ZENBU viewer, showing that the TSS identified by CAGE do align with known transcripts, but none supports the most distal 5′ end annotated by Entrez Gene. The primary data summarized in this image are derived from Arner et al. (100) and may be freely downloaded. The CAGE data were extracted and the diagram produced by Albin Sandelin and Erik Arner. The original data were produced in collaboration with Kenneth Baillie.
Figure 2Transcriptional regulation of . The FANTOM5 analysis across hundreds of cells and tissues revealed the existence of multiple transcription start site (TSS) clusters in the vicinity of a single dominant TSS for the DUSP1 gene, with a classical TATA-box architecture typical of highly inducible genes, as well as at least 14 enhancers in the genomic facility. Upper left panel shows the induction of transcription from this TSS when human monocyte-derived macrophages were treated with LPS. The lower part of the panel illustrates the fact that at least eight of these enhancers showed detectable activation of production of eRNAs detected by CAGE tags. Note that the enhancers were activated around 1–1.5 h, where the peak of DUSP1 transcripts was detected around 2.5 h. The primary data summarized in this image are derived from Arner et al. (100) and may be freely downloaded. The CAGE data were extracted and the diagram produced by Albin Sandelin and Erik Arner. The original data were produced in collaboration with Kenneth Baillie.