4.7 Article

Time-Resolved Gene Expression Analysis Monitors the Regulation of Inflammatory Mediators and Attenuation of Adaptive Immune Response by Vitamin D

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Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms23020911

Keywords

vitamin D; 1a,25-dihydroxyvitamin D-3; transcriptome; PBMCs; vitamin D target genes; inflammatory response; adaptive immune system

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This study focuses on the time course of transcriptional changes in human PBMCs stimulated with 1,25(OH)(2)D3, and reveals that vitamin D regulates the immune system by suppressing the expression of genes involved in inflammation and adaptive immune response.
Peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) belong to the innate and adaptive immune system and are highly sensitive and responsive to changes in their systemic environment. In this study, we focused on the time course of transcriptional changes in freshly isolated human PBMCs 4, 8, 24 and 48 h after onset of stimulation with the active vitamin D metabolite 1 alpha,25-dihydroxyvitamin D-3 (1,25(OH)(2)D-3). Taking all four time points together, 662 target genes were identified and segregated either by time of differential gene expression into 179 primary and 483 secondary targets or by driver of expression change into 293 direct and 369 indirect targets. The latter classification revealed that more than 50% of target genes were primarily driven by the cells' response to ex vivo exposure than by the nuclear hormone and largely explained its down-regulatory effect. Functional analysis indicated vitamin D's role in the suppression of the inflammatory and adaptive immune response by down-regulating ten major histocompatibility complex class II genes, five alarmins of the S100 calcium binding protein A family and by affecting six chemokines of the C-X-C motif ligand family. Taken together, studying time-resolved responses allows to better contextualize the effects of vitamin D on the immune system.

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