IL-32 drives inflammatory responses in IFN-γ primed human macrophages via a Myddosome-dependent pathway and is elevated in COVID-19

  • Ana Ramón-Vázquez
  • , Agnieszka Skowyra
  • , Tadhg Crowley
  • , Janaki Velmurugan
  • , Ciaran Lee
  • , Andrew J Lindsay
  • , Jerzy A Woznicki
  • , Panagiota Stamou
  • , Ornella Nelson
  • , Ian B Jeffery
  • , Amanda J Lohan
  • , Werner C Albrich
  • , Liam O’Mahony
  • , Silvia Melgar
  • , Fergus Shanahan
  • , Xiaohong Cao
  • , Michael Macoritto
  • , Ramkrishna Sadhukhan
  • , Marc C Levesque
  • , Bradford L McRae
  • Melissa Matzelle, Ken Nally

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

IFN-γ is secreted by multiple lymphoid subsets in response to antigen stimulation and can reprogram and prime macrophages epigenetically and transcriptionally to increase responses to inflammatory stimuli such as LPS, IL-1β or TNF-α. IFN-γ-driven M1-like inflammatory macrophage states are shared across human immune-mediated inflammatory diseases (IMIDs) and while IFN-γ is nonredundant for defense to intracellular pathogens it is unclear if this is also the case in IMIDs. To identify additional secreted ligands which could prime and induce M1-like macrophages we screened >600 human proteins in human primary macrophages. Using complementary functional genomics approaches, we discovered that IL-32β induced an M1-like inflammatory state in non-primed and IFN-γ-primed macrophages. IL-32β induced signaling, transcriptional, tolerance, cross-tolerance, and inflammatory responses in macrophages which were MyD88, IRAK1 and Myddosome-dependent. These responses to host IL-32β were similar to yet distinct from, those induced by microbial LPS. IL-32 protein was elevated in serum from patients with severe COVID-19 and IL-32β together with IFN-γ were expressed by T cells and induced a macrophage transcriptional response which was shared by monocytes and macrophages in mild and severe COVID-19.Competing Interest StatementThe authors have declared no competing interest.Science Foundation Ireland, https://ror.org/0271asj38, SFI-13/CDA/2171, SFI-12/RC/2273, SFI-14/SP/2710
Original languageEnglish (Ireland)
Pages (from-to)2025.05.29.656795
JournalbioRxiv
Publication statusPublished - 2025

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'IL-32 drives inflammatory responses in IFN-γ primed human macrophages via a Myddosome-dependent pathway and is elevated in COVID-19'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this