Scientists Identify a CLOCK-targeting lncRNA that Induces Trained Immunity against Tuberculosis
Trained immunity confers innate immune memory via metabolic and epigenetic reprogramming, thus enabling innate immune cells to exhibit an enhanced immune response to secondary pathogenic stimulation. Although the epigenetic basis and functional changes underlying trained immunity in specific immune cell populations have been characterized, the intercellular communication mechanisms and master regulators that orchestrate multicellular immune coordination to establish system-wide trained immunity against infection remain incompletely understood.
Recently, Prof. LIU Cui Hua’s group at the Institute of Microbiology of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (IMCAS), in collaborating with Prof. PANG Yu from Beijing Chest Hospital, has identified a tuberculosis (TB) resister-associated serum exosomal lncRNA, termed TB Resister-derived CLOCK Regulator 1 (TRCR1), which mediates an intercellular immune training axis by modulating circadian regulator CLOCK-mediated epigenetic remodeling (Figure 1). This work was published in Cell Host & Microbe.
TB, which is caused by Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb), has resurged as a leading global infectious disease killer. TB resisters are a special group of TB contacts who developed neither latent TB infection nor active TB despite prolonged and excessive exposure to Mtb. These individuals lack typical Mtb-specific adaptive immune signatures, such as T cell-mediated interferon-γ release, indicating that resisters may possess efficient innate immunity enabling early clearance of Mtb infection. Previous work from Prof. LIU’s group and collaborators demonstrated that monocyte-derived macrophages from TB resisters possess a stronger capacity to clear Mtb (The FASEB Journal, 2021), leading to the hypothesis that their enhanced immune phenotype might be regulated by trained immunity.
In this latest study, the team investigated serum exosomal lncRNAs from different Mtb-exposed populations via multi-omics analysis, identifying TRCR1 as a potent inducer of trained immunity. Mechanistically, the Mtb antigen protein MPT53 stimulates lung epithelial cells to secrete exosomes carrying TRCR1, which are subsequently taken up by monocytes. In monocytes, TRCR1 collaborates with RNA-binding protein FXR2 to stabilize CLOCK mRNA by forming lncRNA-protein-mRNA complexes, thereby elevating CLOCK protein levels. Acting as a histone acetyltransferase, CLOCK then promotes histone H3 acetylation (K9/K14) at immune gene promoters, ultimately establishing epigenetic memory-mediated antimicrobial activity. In mice, TRCR1 training strengthens host anti-Mtb immunity and improves Bacille Calmette-Guérin (BCG) vaccine efficacy.
In summary, this study uncovers an intercellular immune training axis in which exosomal TRCR1 orchestrates CLOCK-mediated epigenetic programming to potentiate innate memory, providing a mechanistic framework and translational strategy to refine BCG vaccination and prevent infectious diseases.

Figure 1. Exosomal lncRNA TRCR1 induces trained immunity by enhancing CLOCK-mediated epigenetic programming
(image by Prof. LIU Cui Hua’s group)
Full text links: A CLOCK-targeting lncRNA induces trained immunity against tuberculosis