The Journal of Clinical Investigation (Jul 2023)

The SWI/SNF chromatin-remodeling subunit DPF2 facilitates NRF2-dependent antiinflammatory and antioxidant gene expression

  • Gloria Mas,
  • Na Man,
  • Yuichiro Nakata,
  • Concepcion Martinez-Caja,
  • Daniel Karl,
  • Felipe Beckedorff,
  • Francesco Tamiro,
  • Chuan Chen,
  • Stephanie Duffort,
  • Hidehiro Itonaga,
  • Adnan K. Mookhtiar,
  • Kranthi Kunkalla,
  • Alfredo M. Valencia,
  • Clayton K. Collings,
  • Cigall Kadoch,
  • Francisco Vega,
  • Scott C. Kogan,
  • Lluis Morey,
  • Daniel Bilbao,
  • Stephen D. Nimer

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 133, no. 13

Abstract

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During emergency hematopoiesis, hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) rapidly proliferate to produce myeloid and lymphoid effector cells, a response that is critical against infection or tissue injury. If unresolved, this process leads to sustained inflammation, which can cause life-threatening diseases and cancer. Here, we identify a role of double PHD fingers 2 (DPF2) in modulating inflammation. DPF2 is a defining subunit of the hematopoiesis-specific BAF (SWI/SNF) chromatin-remodeling complex, and it is mutated in multiple cancers and neurological disorders. We uncovered that hematopoiesis-specific Dpf2-KO mice developed leukopenia, severe anemia, and lethal systemic inflammation characterized by histiocytic and fibrotic tissue infiltration resembling a clinical hyperinflammatory state. Dpf2 loss impaired the polarization of macrophages responsible for tissue repair, induced the unrestrained activation of Th cells, and generated an emergency-like state of HSC hyperproliferation and myeloid cell–biased differentiation. Mechanistically, Dpf2 deficiency resulted in the loss of the BAF catalytic subunit BRG1 from nuclear factor erythroid 2-like 2–controlled (NRF2-controlled) enhancers, impairing the antioxidant and antiinflammatory transcriptional response needed to modulate inflammation. Finally, pharmacological reactivation of NRF2 suppressed the inflammation-mediated phenotypes and lethality of Dpf2Δ/Δ mice. Our work establishes an essential role of the DPF2-BAF complex in licensing NRF2-dependent gene expression in HSCs and immune effector cells to prevent chronic inflammation.

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