4.7 Article

A novel phosphoproteomic landscape evoked in response to type I interferon in the brain and in glial cells

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROINFLAMMATION
Volume 18, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12974-021-02277-x

Keywords

Interferon; Microglia; Astrocyte; Phosphoproteomics; Cerebral type I interferonopathy; Neurodegenerative disease

Funding

  1. Australian Government Research Training Program scholarship
  2. Australian Research Council DECRA award
  3. Heart Foundation (Australia) Future Leader Fellowship

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The study reveals that protein phosphorylation plays an important role in mediating the effects of IFN-I, and IFN-I-induced protein phosphorylation is critical in the development of neurodegenerative diseases.
Background Type I interferons (IFN-I) are key responders to central nervous system infection and injury and are also increased in common neurodegenerative diseases. Their effects are primarily mediated via transcriptional regulation of several hundred interferon-regulated genes. In addition, IFN-I activate several kinases including members of the MAPK and PI3K families. Yet, how changes to the global protein phosphoproteome contribute to the cellular response to IFN-I is unknown. Methods The cerebral phosphoproteome of mice with brain-targeted chronic production of the IFN-I, IFN-alpha, was obtained. Changes in phosphorylation were analyzed by ontology and pathway analysis and kinase enrichment predictions. These were verified by phenotypic analysis, immunohistochemistry and immunoblots. In addition, primary murine microglia and astrocytes, the brain's primary IFN-I-responding cells, were acutely treated with IFN-alpha and the global phosphoproteome was similarly analyzed. Results We identified widespread protein phosphorylation as a novel mechanism by which IFN-I mediate their effects. In our mouse model for IFN-I-induced neurodegeneration, protein phosphorylation, rather than the proteome, aligned with the clinical hallmarks and pathological outcome, including impaired development, motor dysfunction and seizures. In vitro experiments revealed extensive and rapid IFN-I-induced protein phosphorylation in microglia and astrocytes. Response to acute IFN-I stimulation was independent of gene expression and mediated by a small number of kinase families. The changes in the phosphoproteome affected a diverse range of cellular processes and functional analysis suggested that this response induced an immediate reactive state and prepared cells for subsequent transcriptional responses. Conclusions Our studies reveal a hitherto unappreciated role for changes in the protein phosphorylation landscape in cellular responses to IFN-I and thus provide insights for novel diagnostic and therapeutic strategies for neurological diseases caused by IFN-I.

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