Transcriptional profiling unveils type I and II interferon networks in blood and tissues across diseases
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Akul Singhania Christine Graham Leona Gabrysova Lucia Moreira-Teixeira Evangelos Stavropoulos Jonathan M Pitt Probir Chakravarty Annika Warnatsch William Branchett Laura Conejero Jing-Wen Lin Sophia Davidson Mark S Wilson Gregory Bancroft Jean Langhorne Eva Frickel Abdul K Sesay Simon L Priestnall Eleanor Herbert Marianna Ioannou Qian Wang Ian R Humphreys Jonathan Dodd Peter JM Openshaw Katrin D Mayer-Barber Dragana Jankovic Alan Sher Clare M Lloyd Nicole Baldwin Damien Chaussabel Venizelos Papayannopoulos Andreas Wack Jacques F Banchereau Virginia M Pascual Anne O'Garra Toggle all authors (35)
Abstract
Understanding how immune challenges elicit different responses is critical for diagnosing and deciphering immune regulation. Using a modular strategy to interpret the complex transcriptional host response in mouse models of infection and inflammation, we show a breadth of immune responses in the lung. Lung immune signatures are dominated by either IFN-γ and IFN-inducible, IL-17-induced neutrophil- or allergy-associated gene expression. Type I IFN and IFN-γ-inducible, but not IL-17- or allergy-associated signatures, are preserved in the blood. While IL-17-associated genes identified in lung are detected in blood, the allergy signature is only detectable in blood CD4+ effector cells. Type I IFN-inducible genes are abrogated in the absence of IFN-γ signaling and decrease in the absence of IFNAR signaling, both independently contributing to the regulation of granulocyte responses and pathology during Toxoplasma gondii infection. Our framework provides an ideal tool for comparative analyses of transcriptional signatures contributing to protection or pathogenesis in disease.
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Publisher website (DOI) 10.1038/s41467-019-10601-6
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Europe PubMed Central 31253760
Pubmed 31253760
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