Frontiers in Immunology (Jun 2023)

Pro-inflammatory polarization and colorectal cancer modulate alternative and intronic polyadenylation in primary human macrophages

  • Joana Wilton,
  • Joana Wilton,
  • Joana Wilton,
  • Filipa Lopes de Mendonça,
  • Filipa Lopes de Mendonça,
  • Isabel Pereira-Castro,
  • Isabel Pereira-Castro,
  • Michael Tellier,
  • Takayuki Nojima,
  • Angela M. Costa,
  • Angela M. Costa,
  • Jaime Freitas,
  • Shona Murphy,
  • Maria Jose Oliveira,
  • Maria Jose Oliveira,
  • Maria Jose Oliveira,
  • Maria Jose Oliveira,
  • Nicholas J. Proudfoot,
  • Alexandra Moreira,
  • Alexandra Moreira,
  • Alexandra Moreira

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2023.1182525
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14

Abstract

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IntroductionMacrophages are essential cells of the immune system that alter their inflammatory profile depending on their microenvironment. Alternative polyadenylation in the 3’UTR (3’UTR-APA) and intronic polyadenylation (IPA) are mechanisms that modulate gene expression, particularly in cancer and activated immune cells. Yet, how polarization and colorectal cancer (CRC) cells affect 3’UTR-APA and IPA in primary human macrophages was unclear.MethodsIn this study, we isolated primary human monocytes from healthy donors, differentiated and polarized them into a pro-inflammatory state and performed indirect co-cultures with CRC cells. ChrRNA-Seq and 3’RNA-Seq was performed to quantify gene expression and characterize new 3’UTR-APA and IPA mRNA isoforms.ResultsOur results show that polarization of human macrophages from naïve to a pro-inflammatory state causes a marked increase of proximal polyA site selection in the 3’UTR and IPA events in genes relevant to macrophage functions. Additionally, we found a negative correlation between differential gene expression and IPA during pro-inflammatory polarization of primary human macrophages. As macrophages are abundant immune cells in the CRC microenvironment that either promote or abrogate cancer progression, we investigated how indirect exposure to CRC cells affects macrophage gene expression and 3’UTR-APA and IPA events. Co-culture with CRC cells alters the inflammatory phenotype of macrophages, increases the expression of pro-tumoral genes and induces 3’UTR-APA alterations. Notably, some of these gene expression differences were also found in tumor-associated macrophages of CRC patients, indicating that they are physiologically relevant. Upon macrophage pro-inflammatory polarization, SRSF12 is the pre-mRNA processing gene that is most upregulated. After SRSF12 knockdown in M1 macrophages there is a global downregulation of gene expression, in particular in genes involved in gene expression regulation and in immune responses.DiscussionOur results reveal new 3’UTR-APA and IPA mRNA isoforms produced during pro-inflammatory polarization of primary human macrophages and CRC co-culture that may be used in the future as diagnostic or therapeutic tools. Furthermore, our results highlight a function for SRSF12 in pro-inflammatory macrophages, key cells in the tumor response.

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