NF-κB restrains nutrient-dependent transcription programs through chromatin modulation in Drosophila
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The co-evolution of immune and metabolic systems has endowed immune signaling pathways with distinct control of cellular metabolism. Innate immune transcription factors, such as nuclear factor κB (NF-κB), have thus emerged as key regulators of adaptive metabolic responses to changes in diet and nutrition. Utilizing chromatin accessibility genomics, we found that Drosophila NF-κB (Relish) can restrain nutrient-dependent metabolic transcriptional programs that control cellular catabolism of energy substrates, divergent from the protein’s canonical role as a transcriptional activator. NF-κB/Relish restricts chromatin accessibility through modulating histone acetylation at metabolic target gene loci, which restrains metabolic gene transcription and blocks excessive activation of nutrient-dependent metabolic programs. Targeted genetic screening revealed that histone deacetylase 6 (HDAC6) interacts with NF-κB/Relish at NF-κB DNA regulatory motifs to limit chromatin accessibility and repress metabolic transcriptional programs. These results highlight that innate immune transcription factors can epigenetically restrain cellular catabolism to fine-tune nutrient-dependent metabolic adaptation.