Scientists have finally discovered the switch that aids in the defense mechanism against infections.
New epigenetic switch in blood stem cells and progenitor cells of mice that can trigger the switch from one mode to the other has been found by scientists at the German Cancer Research Center (Deutsches Krebsforschungszentrum, DKFZ), as published in the journal Science Immunology. During infections, the hematopoietic system, which is a system that deals with the creation of cells and blood in the body, switches from normal to emergency mode. This improves the defense against pathogens.
The Emergency Switch
If the emergency program of hematopoiesis starts up in the body, this signals an alarm state of the immune system and serves two different purposes: Compared to hematopoiesis in "normal mode," the emergency program results in increased replenishment of immune cells that are consumed during infections or inflammations. In addition, the emergency program puts the entire immune system into a pre-activation that helps clear infections more quickly.Characteristics of the emergency program are, for example, an increased division rate of blood stem cells and a shift in the balance of mature white blood cells in favor of myeloid cells (macrophages and granulocytes). Normally, the emergency program is triggered by the typical molecular components of pathogens or by pro-inflammatory messenger substances such as certain interferons.
But what happens in the blood stem cells and progenitor cells? Is there a cellular switch that triggers the emergency program? Scientists led by Nikolaus Dietlein and Hans-Reimer Rodewald of the German Cancer Research Center (Deutsches Krebsforschungszentrum, DKFZ) targeted a specific epigenetic modification, abbreviated H2Bub1.
It is involved in switching on genes that are activated by interferon as a result of a viral infection and that are important for the defense against infection. The modification, which attaches to the packaging proteins of the DNA, the histones, is removed again by the enzyme USP22.
Could H2Bub1 and USP22 be the sought-after switches that trigger the emergency program in the blood stem cell? The researchers led by Rodewald investigated this in mice whose blood stem cells (USP22) were genetically switched off. In these animals, the emergency program of hematopoiesis with all its key features ran without any detectable infection or increased interferon levels.
Role of Epigenetics in Infections
The genetically modified animals were better able to fight off infection with the bacterium Listeria monocytogenes than normal mice. In addition, important scavenger cells in their blood, neutrophil granulocytes, were more successful at engulfing bacteria.As expected, the genetic material in the blood cells of the gene-modified animals also had significantly more epigenetic H2Bub1 modifications.
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H2Bub1 and USP22 are also found in human cells and, according to current research, perform comparable functions there to those in mice.
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Source-Eurekalert