Abstract
Cytokines play a central role in immune development, pathogen responses, and diseases. Cytokines are highly regulated at the transcriptional level by combinations of transcription factors (TFs) that recruit cofactors and the transcriptional machinery. Here, we review three decades of studies to generate a comprehensive database reporting 843 and 647 interactions between TFs and cytokines genes, in human and mouse respectively (http://cytreg.bu.edu). We provide a historic perspective on cytokine regulation discussing research trends and biases. More importantly, by integrating this comprehensive database with other functional datasets, we determine general principles governing the transcriptional regulation of cytokine genes. In particular, we show a correlation between TF connectivity and immune phenotype and disease, we discuss the balance between tissue-specific and pathogen-activated TFs regulating each cytokine gene, and cooperativity and plasticity in cytokine regulation. Finally, we illustrate the use of our database as a blueprint to study TF-cytokine regulatory axes in autoimmune diseases.