Journal of Neuroinflammation (Aug 2024)

IRF3 regulates neuroinflammatory responses and the expression of genes associated with Alzheimer’s disease

  • Radhika Joshi,
  • Veronika Brezani,
  • Gabrielle M. Mey,
  • Sergi Guixé-Muntet,
  • Marti Ortega-Ribera,
  • Yuan Zhuang,
  • Adam Zivny,
  • Sebastian Werneburg,
  • Jordi Gracia-Sancho,
  • Gyongyi Szabo

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12974-024-03203-7
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 21, no. 1
pp. 1 – 22

Abstract

Read online

Abstract The pathological role of interferon signaling is emerging in neuroinflammatory disorders, yet, the specific role of Interferon Regulatory Factor 3 (IRF3) in neuroinflammation remains poorly understood. Here, we show that global IRF3 deficiency delays TLR4-mediated signaling in microglia and attenuates the hallmark features of LPS-induced inflammation such as cytokine release, microglial reactivity, astrocyte activation, myeloid cell infiltration, and inflammasome activation. Moreover, expression of a constitutively active IRF3 (S388D/S390D: IRF3-2D) in microglia induces a transcriptional program reminiscent of the Activated Response Microglia and the expression of genes associated with Alzheimer’s disease, notably apolipoprotein-e. Using bulk-RNAseq of IRF3-2D brain myeloid cells, we identified Z-DNA binding protein-1 (ZBP1) as a target of IRF3 that is relevant across various neuroinflammatory disorders. Lastly, we show IRF3 phosphorylation and IRF3-dependent ZBP1 induction in response to Aβ in primary microglia cultures. Together, our results identify IRF3 as an important regulator of LPS and Aβ -mediated neuroinflammatory responses and highlight IRF3 as a central regulator of disease-specific gene activation in different neuroinflammatory diseases.

Keywords