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Dynamic expression profiling of type I and type III interferon‐stimulated hepatocytes reveals a stable hierarchy of gene expression
Author(s) -
Bolen Christopher R.,
Ding Siyuan,
Robek Michael D.,
Kleinstein Steven H.
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
hepatology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.488
H-Index - 361
eISSN - 1527-3350
pISSN - 0270-9139
DOI - 10.1002/hep.26657
Subject(s) - biology , interferon , gene expression profiling , gene expression , gene , microarray analysis techniques , immune system , microarray , regulation of gene expression , immunology , genetics
Despite activating similar signaling cascades, the type I and type III interferons (IFNs) differ in their ability to antagonize virus replication. However, it is not clear whether these cytokines induce unique antiviral states, particularly in the liver, where the clinically important hepatitis B and C viruses cause persistent infection. Here, clustering and promoter analyses of microarray‐based gene expression profiling were combined with mechanistic studies of signaling pathways to dynamically characterize the transcriptional responses induced by these cytokines in Huh7 hepatoma cells and primary human hepatocytes. Type I and III IFNs differed greatly in their level of interferon‐stimulated gene (ISG) induction with a clearly detectable hierarchy (IFN‐β > IFN‐α > IFN‐λ3 > IFN‐λ1 > IFN‐λ2). Notably, although the hierarchy identified varying numbers of differentially expressed genes when quantified using common statistical thresholds, further analysis of gene expression over multiple timepoints indicated that the individual IFNs do not in fact regulate unique sets of genes. The kinetic profiles of IFN‐induced gene expression were also qualitatively similar with the important exception of IFN‐α. While stimulation with either IFN‐β or IFN‐λs resulted in a similar long‐lasting ISG induction, IFN‐α signaling peaked early after stimulation then declined due to a negative feedback mechanism. The quantitative expression hierarchy and unique kinetics of IFN‐α reveal potential specific roles for individual IFNs in the immune response, and elucidate the mechanism behind previously observed differences in IFN antiviral activity. While current clinical trials are focused on IFN‐λ1 as a potential antiviral therapy, the finding that IFN‐λ3 invariably possesses the highest activity among type III IFNs suggests that this cytokine may have superior clinical activity. (H epatology 2014;59:1262‐1272)