Skip to Content
Merck
  • The Nuclear Receptor PPARγ Controls Progressive Macrophage Polarization as a Ligand-Insensitive Epigenomic Ratchet of Transcriptional Memory.

The Nuclear Receptor PPARγ Controls Progressive Macrophage Polarization as a Ligand-Insensitive Epigenomic Ratchet of Transcriptional Memory.

Immunity (2018-10-18)
Bence Daniel, Gergely Nagy, Zsolt Czimmerer, Attila Horvath, David W Hammers, Ixchelt Cuaranta-Monroy, Szilard Poliska, Petros Tzerpos, Zsuzsanna Kolostyak, Tristan T Hays, Andreas Patsalos, René Houtman, Sascha Sauer, Jean Francois-Deleuze, Fraydoon Rastinejad, Balint L Balint, H Lee Sweeney, Laszlo Nagy
ABSTRACT

Macrophages polarize into distinct phenotypes in response to complex environmental cues. We found that the nuclear receptor PPARγ drove robust phenotypic changes in macrophages upon repeated stimulation with interleukin (IL)-4. The functions of PPARγ on macrophage polarization in this setting were independent of ligand binding. Ligand-insensitive PPARγ bound DNA and recruited the coactivator P300 and the architectural protein RAD21. This established a permissive chromatin environment that conferred transcriptional memory by facilitating the binding of the transcriptional regulator STAT6 and RNA polymerase II, leading to robust production of enhancer and mRNAs upon IL-4 re-stimulation. Ligand-insensitive PPARγ binding controlled the expression of an extracellular matrix remodeling-related gene network in macrophages. Expression of these genes increased during muscle regeneration in a mouse model of injury, and this increase coincided with the detection of IL-4 and PPARγ in the affected tissue. Thus, a predominantly ligand-insensitive PPARγ:RXR cistrome regulates progressive and/or reinforcing macrophage polarization.

MATERIALS
Product Number
Brand
Product Description

Sigma-Aldrich
Di(N-succinimidyl) glutarate, ≥97.0% (CHN)
Sigma-Aldrich
Rosiglitazone, ≥98% (HPLC)
Sigma-Aldrich
Hexadimethrine bromide, ≥94% (titration)