4.8 Article

Promoter Binding and Nuclear Retention Features of Zebrafish IRF Family Members in IFN Response

Journal

FRONTIERS IN IMMUNOLOGY
Volume 13, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2022.861262

Keywords

interferon regulatory factor; DNA binding; nuclear import; interferon expression; nuclear localization signal

Categories

Funding

  1. Application Fundamental Frontier Special Project of Wuhan [2020020601012256]
  2. Strategic Priority Research Program of the Chinese Academy of Sciences [XDA24010308]
  3. National Key R&D Program of China [2018YFD0900302]
  4. National Natural Science Foundation [31772875, 31972826]

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The study reveals the regulatory roles of zebrafish IRF family members in interferon response, which are influenced by their subcellular localization and promoter binding. Zebrafish IRF family members display three distinctive patterns of constitutive localization and can act as activators or repressors of interferon gene transcription.
Interferon regulatory factors (IRFs) constitute a family of transcription factors that synchronize interferon (IFN) antiviral response through translocating to nucleus and binding to the promoters of IFN and IFN-stimulated genes (ISGs). Fish contain 11 IRF members; however, whether or how fish IRF family genes function in IFN response remains limited. Herein, we determine the regulatory roles of 11 zebrafish IRF family members in IFN response relevant to their subcellular localization and promoter binding. Zebrafish IRF family members display three patterns of constitutive localization, only in nucleus (IRF1/2/9/11), only in cytoplasm (IRF3/5/7), and largely in nucleus with small amounts in cytoplasm (IRF4b/6/8/10). DNA pull-down assays confirm that all zebrafish IRF proteins are capable to bind fish IFN promoters, albeit to various degrees, thus regulating IFN gene transcription as activators (IRF1/3/5/6/7/8/9/11) or repressors (IRF2/4b/10). Further characterization of distinct IFN gene activation reveals that IRF1/3/5/6/7/8/9/11 efficiently stimulate zebrafish IFN phi 1 expression, and IRF1/7/11 are responsible for zebrafish IFN phi 3 expression. Two conserved basic residues within the helix alpha 3 of DNA binding domains (DBDs) contribute to constitutive or inducible nuclear import for all zebrafish IRF family members and DNA binding for most members, thereby enabling them to function as transcription factors. Our results reveal a conserved and general mechanism that specifies zebrafish IRF family proteins to nuclear import and DNA binding, thereby regulating fish IFN response.

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