Nature Communications (Sep 2024)

HIF-2α-dependent induction of miR-29a restrains TH1 activity during T cell dependent colitis

  • Agnieszka K. Czopik,
  • Eóin N. McNamee,
  • Victoria Vaughn,
  • Xiangsheng Huang,
  • In Hyuk Bang,
  • Trent Clark,
  • Yanyu Wang,
  • Wei Ruan,
  • Tom Nguyen,
  • Joanne C. Masterson,
  • Eunyoung Tak,
  • Sandra Frank,
  • Colm B. Collins,
  • Howard Li,
  • Cristian Rodriguez-Aguayo,
  • Gabriel Lopez-Berestein,
  • Mark E. Gerich,
  • Glenn T. Furuta,
  • Xiaoyi Yuan,
  • Anil K. Sood,
  • Edwin F. de Zoeten,
  • Holger K. Eltzschig

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-52113-y
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
pp. 1 – 17

Abstract

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Abstract Metabolic imbalance leading to inflammatory hypoxia and stabilization of hypoxia-inducible transcription factors (HIFs) is a hallmark of inflammatory bowel diseases. We hypothesize that HIF could be stabilized in CD4+ T cells during intestinal inflammation and alter the functional responses of T cells via regulation of microRNAs. Our assays reveal markedly increased T cell-intrinsic hypoxia and stabilization of HIF protein during experimental colitis. microRNA screen in primary CD4+ T cells points us towards miR-29a and our subsequent studies identify a selective role for HIF-2α in CD4-cell-intrinsic induction of miR-29a during hypoxia. Mice with T cell-intrinsic HIF-2α deletion display elevated T-bet (target of miR-29a) levels and exacerbated intestinal inflammation. Mice with miR-29a deficiency in T cells show enhanced intestinal inflammation. T cell-intrinsic overexpression of HIF-2α or delivery of miR-29a mimetic dampen TH1-driven colitis. In this work, we show a previously unrecognized function for hypoxia-dependent induction of miR-29a in attenuating TH1-mediated inflammation.