Chromatin Remodeling and Transcriptional Silencing Define the Dynamic Innate Immune Response of Tissue Resident Macrophages After Burn Injury

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Abstract

Severe burn injury induces long-lasting immune dysfunction, but the molecular mechanisms underlying this phenomenon remain unclear. We hypothesized that burn injury leads to epigenetic and transcriptional reprogramming of innate immune cells. Splenic F4/80⁺ macrophages were isolated from mice at days 2, 9, and 14 days post-20% contact burn injury. Targeted transcriptomics and MAPit single-molecule chromatin profiling were used to assess immune, metabolic, and epigenetic changes. Canonical pathway analysis was performed to infer functional shifts over time. Burn injury induced a biphasic response in macrophages. Early after injury (Day 2), there was broad transcriptional suppression and epigenetic silencing of inflammatory regulators, includingStat3,Traf6, andNfkb1. Over time (Days 9 and 14), loci associated with anti-inflammatory mediators such asIl-10andSocs3exhibited progressive chromatin opening and transcriptional upregulation. Metabolic gene profiles revealed persistent suppression of mitochondrial and oxidative phosphorylation programs. Canonical pathway analysis demonstrated early IL-10 signaling activation with sustained suppression of classical macrophage activation pathways. Chromatin architecture changes included nucleosome sliding and ejection events, consistent with dynamic, locus-specific regulation. This work challenges the classical notion of burn-induced immune suppression as purely a consequence of systemic inflammation. Instead, we reveal a programmed and locus-specific epigenetic architecture that may shape macrophage immune and metabolic function long after the acute phase.

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