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The transcriptional repressor Hes1 attenuates inflammation by regulating transcription elongation.

Yingli ShangMaddalena CoppoTeng HeFei NingLi YuLan KangBin ZhangChanyang JuYu QiaoBaohong ZhaoManfred GesslerInez RogatskyXiaoyu Hu
Published in: Nature immunology (2016)
Most of the known regulatory mechanisms that curb inflammatory gene expression target pre-transcription-initiation steps, and evidence for post-initiation regulation of inflammatory gene expression remains scarce. We found that the transcriptional repressor Hes1 suppressed production of CXCL1, a chemokine that is crucial for recruiting neutrophils. Hes1 negatively regulated neutrophil recruitment in vivo in a manner that was dependent on macrophage-produced CXCL1, and it attenuated the severity of inflammatory arthritis. Mechanistically, inhibition of Cxcl1 expression by Hes1 did not involve modification of transcription initiation. Instead, Hes1 inhibited signal-induced recruitment of the positive transcription-elongation complex P-TEFb and thereby prevented phosphorylation of RNA polymerase II at Ser2 and productive elongation. Thus, our results identify Hes1 as a homeostatic suppressor of inflammatory responses that exerts its suppressive function by regulating transcription elongation.
Keyphrases
  • transcription factor
  • gene expression
  • oxidative stress
  • dna methylation
  • poor prognosis
  • adipose tissue
  • high glucose
  • heat shock
  • endothelial cells
  • long non coding rna