Mechanism: Chronic interferon in aged cells establishes irreversible H3K9me3 chromatin locks on ISG promoters, blocking STAT activation independently of SOCS. Readout: Readout: Combined SOCS removal and H3K9me3 inhibition rescues p-STAT1/2 phosphorylation and restores ISG transcription and cellular functional scores.
Hypothesis
Aging converts reversible SOCS-mediated JAK-STAT feedback into an irreversible exhaustion state by establishing stable heterochromatin at interferon‑stimulated gene (ISG) promoters. This heterochromatin is marked by H3K9me3 deposition, which blocks STAT binding and p-STAT accumulation even when SOCS proteins are removed.
Mechanistic reasoning
- Chronic low‑grade IFN in aged tissues creates a persistent stimulus that maintains JAK‑STAT activation long enough to recruit histone methyltransferases (e.g., SUV39H1/2) to phosphorylated STAT complexes.
- SUV39H1/2 then catalyze H3K9me3 on nucleosomes flanking ISG promoters, recruiting HP1 proteins and compacting chromatin.
- Once established, this mark is resistant to SOCS knockdown because SOCS only interferes with upstream kinase activity, not with downstream nucleosome state.
- The result is a true signaling exhaustion: p-STAT levels fail to rise upon acute IFN challenge, and ISG transcription remains low despite intact JAK2 and STAT1/2 proteins.
This model explains why aged satellite cells and neutrophils show intrinsic JAK-STAT defects that persist outside acute inflammation (3) (4) and why epigenomic remodeling drives tissue‑specific inflammatory gene induction (5).
Testable predictions
- SOCS ablation alone will not restore p-STAT responses in primary macrophages or satellite cells from old mice after prolonged IFN‑β exposure.
- Combined SOCS knockdown with pharmacological inhibition of H3K9 methyltransferases (e.g., chaetocin) or genetic loss of SUV39H1 will rescue p-STAT1/2 phosphorylation and ISG chromatin accessibility.
- ATAC‑seq or CUT&RUN for H3K9me3 will show increased enrichment at promoters of classic ISGs (e.g., ISG15, MX1, OAS1) in aged cells after chronic IFN, and this enrichment will decrease upon SUV39H1 inhibition.
- Functional read‑outs such as proliferation of aged satellite cells or phagocytic capacity of aged neutrophils will improve only when both SOCS is blocked and H3K9me3 is reduced.
Experimental design (outline)
- Isolate primary bone‑marrow‑derived macrophages (BMDMs) from young (3‑month) and old (24‑month) mice.
- Treat cells with IFN‑β (100 ng ml⁻¹) for 72 h to mimic chronic exposure.
- Transfect with siRNA targeting SOCS1 and SOCS3 (or use CRISPR‑Cas9 knockout) and, in parallel, treat with chaetocin (1 µM) or use SUV39H1‑deficient cells.
- Wash out IFN, rest 4 h, then rechallenge with IFN‑β (10 ng ml⁻¹) for 15 min.
- Measure p-STAT1/2 by flow cytometry or Western blot.
- Perform ATAC‑seq and H3K9me3 CUT&RUN on rested and rechallenged cells.
- Assess ISG mRNA induction (qPCR) and functional outcomes (e.g., ROS production, phagocytosis).
Falsifiability
If p-STAT responses and ISG chromatin accessibility are fully restored by SOCS knockdown alone in aged cells, the hypothesis is falsified. Conversely, if H3K9me3 inhibition fails to rescue signaling despite SOCS loss, the proposed chromatin mechanism is insufficient and alternative exhaustion routes (e.g., DNA methylation, STAT oxidation) must be considered.
Implications
Distinguishing reversible feedback from irreversible exhaustion redirects therapeutic strategies: aging‑associated inflammation may require epigenetic drugs (H3K9 methyltransferase inhibitors, HDAC activators) rather than upstream JAK blockers alone. This approach could restore tissue‑specific IFN responsiveness without broadly suppressing immunity.
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