Description du projet
Quel est le degré d’immunogénicité des rétroéléments endogènes?
Les rétroéléments endogènes sont des restes de séquences rétrovirales présentes dans le génome humain, qui sont transcrites tout au long de la vie d’une cellule. Leur mobilisation a été associée à différentes conditions physiopathologiques, notamment l’inflammation, le cancer et le vieillissement. Financé par le Conseil européen de la recherche, le projet EndoRPHIm part de l’hypothèse selon laquelle ces rétroéléments ont également une fonction physiologique. Les chercheurs étudieront comment ils sont détectés par le système immunitaire et s’ils peuvent potentiellement déclencher une réponse immunitaire bénéfique. Les résultats fourniront un aperçu sans précédent du rôle des rétroéléments endogènes dans l’immunité.
Objectif
Almost half of our genome is occupied by ancient viral sequences that can be mobilized under certain conditions and either jump or copy themselves from one location to another. A group of these mobile genetic elements is called endogenous retroelements. Mobilization of retroelements like LINE1 has been shown to cause cancer via insertional mutagenesis. In recent years LINE1 activation has also been associated with the development of inflammatory diseases and inflammation-driven ageing. This means, we collected substantial evidence that half of our genome can potentially make us sick. Nevertheless, we keep replicating these sequences with every cell division at great energetic cost, suggesting that keeping them provides an evolutionary advantage.
In my project I will investigate if sporadic retroelement transcription in healthy cells serves a physiological role in priming the immune system through the constant sensing of retroelement-derived nucleic acids by intracellular nucleic acid sensors. My team and I will investigate how retroelement transcription is regulated in response daily life stresses like virus infections or DNA damage. I propose that instead of regulating transcription themselves, retroelements are largely regulated by canonical gene expression. In mouse models we will investigate how retroelements are sensed by the innate immune system and if this has functional consequences for establishing protective and pathologic immunity. Furthermore, we will investigate the exact molecular mechanism, by which retroelement-derived single stranded cDNA activates the innate immune system, which is currently not understood. Our project involves the development of a new deep sequencing workflow for identification of the genomic origin of retroelement transcripts and a new mouse model to study endogenous LINE1 elements in vivo.
I believe that my project can fundamentally change our view on the role of endogenous retroelements as modulators of host immunity.
Champ scientifique
Programme(s)
- HORIZON.1.1 - European Research Council (ERC) Main Programme
Régime de financement
ERC - Support for frontier research (ERC)Institution d’accueil
53127 Bonn
Allemagne