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The nuclear receptor REV-ERB? mediates circadian regulation of innate immunity through selective regulation of inflammatory cytokines.


ABSTRACT: Diurnal variation in inflammatory and immune function is evident in the physiology and pathology of humans and animals, but molecular mechanisms and mediating cell types that provide this gating remain unknown. By screening cytokine responses in mice to endotoxin challenge at different times of day, we reveal that the magnitude of response exhibited pronounced temporal dependence, yet only within a subset of proinflammatory cytokines. Disruption of the circadian clockwork in macrophages (primary effector cells of the innate immune system) by conditional targeting of a key clock gene (bmal1) removed all temporal gating of endotoxin-induced cytokine response in cultured cells and in vivo. Loss of circadian gating was coincident with suppressed rev-erb? expression, implicating this nuclear receptor as a potential link between the clock and inflammatory pathways. This finding was confirmed in vivo and in vitro through genetic and pharmacological modulation of REV-ERB? activity. Circadian gating of endotoxin response was lost in rev-erb?(-/-) mice and in cultured macrophages from these animals, despite maintenance of circadian rhythmicity within these cells. Using human macrophages, which show circadian clock gene oscillations and rhythmic endotoxin responses, we demonstrate that administration of a synthetic REV-ERB ligand, or genetic knockdown of rev-erb? expression, is effective at modulating the production and release of the proinflammatory cytokine IL-6. This work demonstrates that the macrophage clockwork provides temporal gating of systemic responses to endotoxin, and identifies REV-ERB? as the key link between the clock and immune function. REV-ERB? may therefore represent a unique therapeutic target in human inflammatory disease.

SUBMITTER: Gibbs JE 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC3258648 | biostudies-literature | 2012 Jan

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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The nuclear receptor REV-ERBα mediates circadian regulation of innate immunity through selective regulation of inflammatory cytokines.

Gibbs Julie E JE   Blaikley John J   Beesley Stephen S   Matthews Laura L   Simpson Karen D KD   Boyce Susan H SH   Farrow Stuart N SN   Else Kathryn J KJ   Singh Dave D   Ray David W DW   Loudon Andrew S I AS  

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 20111219 2


Diurnal variation in inflammatory and immune function is evident in the physiology and pathology of humans and animals, but molecular mechanisms and mediating cell types that provide this gating remain unknown. By screening cytokine responses in mice to endotoxin challenge at different times of day, we reveal that the magnitude of response exhibited pronounced temporal dependence, yet only within a subset of proinflammatory cytokines. Disruption of the circadian clockwork in macrophages (primary  ...[more]

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