bims-traimu Biomed News
on Trained immunity
Issue of 2026–02–22
four papers selected by
Yantong Wan, Southern Medical University



  1. J Exp Med. 2026 Apr 06. pii: e20250976. [Epub ahead of print]223(4):
      Macrophages, as key sentinel cells of the innate immune system, can retain memory of prior stimulus exposure. IFNγ plays a central role in maintaining trained immunity in vivo and can induce potent memory in macrophages. Such memory is associated with the formation of de novo enhancers that alter gene expression responses to subsequent stimuli. However, how such enhancers are maintained after cytokine exposure remains unclear. We report that the mechanism underlying durable IFNγ-induced enhancers is not cell intrinsic. IFNγ-treated macrophages continue to exhibit JAK/STAT signaling days after cytokine removal. Blocking IFNγ signaling with a JAK inhibitor or anti-IFNγ neutralizing antibodies after cytokine removal is sufficient to reverse IFNγ-induced enhancers and erase the potentiated state of the treated macrophages. Our findings suggest that epigenetic changes in macrophages do not inherently encode innate immune memory or a "potentiated" macrophage state, but in fact are themselves dependent on ongoing signaling from cytokines sequestered at the cell surface.
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1084/jem.20250976
  2. Inflamm Res. 2026 Feb 18. 75(1): 40
      
    Keywords:  DNA methylation; Docosahexaenoic acid (DHA); Innate immune memory; Monocyte exhaustion; Sepsis
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1007/s00011-026-02194-w
  3. J Exp Med. 2026 Apr 06. pii: e20252624. [Epub ahead of print]223(4):
      Innate immune cells can retain molecular imprints of past encounters long after the initial stimulus has ceased. In this issue, Gorin et al. (https://doi.org/10.1084/jem.20250976) reveal an unexpected mechanism by which IFN-γ sustains trained immune states through prolonged signaling driven by cytokine retention at the cell surface.
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1084/jem.20252624