To ensure a robust immune response to pathogens without risking immunopathology, the kinetics and amplitude of inflammatory gene expression in macrophages need to be exquisitely well controlled. There is a growing appreciation for stress-responsive membraneless organelles (MLOs) regulating various steps of eukaryotic gene expression in response to extrinsic cues. Here, we implicate the nuclear paraspeckle, a highly ordered biomolecular condensate that nucleates on the lncRNA, in tuning innate immune gene expression in murine macrophages. In response to a variety of innate agonists, macrophage paraspeckles rapidly aggregate (0.5 h poststimulation) and disaggregate (2 h poststimulation). Paraspeckle maintenance and aggregation require active transcription and MAPK signaling, whereas paraspeckle disaggregation requires degradation of via the nuclear RNA exosome. In response to lipopolysaccharide treatment, KO macrophages fail to properly express a large cohort of proinflammatory cytokines, chemokines, and antimicrobial mediators. Consequently, KO macrophages cannot control replication of serovar Typhimurium or vesicular stomatitis virus. These findings highlight a prominent role for MLOs in orchestrating the macrophage response to pathogens and support a model whereby dynamic assembly and disassembly of paraspeckles reorganizes the nuclear landscape to enable inflammatory gene expression following innate stimuli.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10907238 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2312587121 | DOI Listing |
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