PLoS ONE (Jan 2013)

IFN-α regulates Blimp-1 expression via miR-23a and miR-125b in both monocytes-derived DC and pDC.

  • Stefania Parlato,
  • Roberto Bruni,
  • Paola Fragapane,
  • Debora Salerno,
  • Cinzia Marcantonio,
  • Paola Borghi,
  • Paola Tataseo,
  • Anna Rita Ciccaglione,
  • Carlo Presutti,
  • Giulia Romagnoli,
  • Irene Bozzoni,
  • Filippo Belardelli,
  • Lucia Gabriele

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0072833
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 8
p. e72833

Abstract

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Type I interferon (IFN-I) have emerged as crucial mediators of cellular signals controlling DC differentiation and function. Human DC differentiated from monocytes in the presence of IFN-α (IFN-α DC) show a partially mature phenotype and a special capability of stimulating CD4+ T cell and cross-priming CD8+ T cells. Likewise, plasmacytoid DC (pDC) are blood DC highly specialized in the production of IFN-α in response to viruses and other danger signals, whose functional features may be shaped by IFN-I. Here, we investigated the molecular mechanisms stimulated by IFN-α in driving human monocyte-derived DC differentiation and performed parallel studies on peripheral unstimulated and IFN-α-treated pDC. A specific miRNA signature was induced in IFN-α DC and selected miRNAs, among which miR-23a and miR-125b, proved to be negatively associated with up-modulation of Blimp-1 occurring during IFN-α-driven DC differentiation. Of note, monocyte-derived IFN-α DC and in vitro IFN-α-treated pDC shared a restricted pattern of miRNAs regulating Blimp-1 expression as well as some similar phenotypic, molecular and functional hallmarks, supporting the existence of a potential relationship between these DC populations. On the whole, these data uncover a new role of Blimp-1 in human DC differentiation driven by IFN-α and identify Blimp-1 as an IFN-α-mediated key regulator potentially accounting for shared functional features between IFN-α DC and pDC.