Innate immunity defends against infection but also mediates immunoregulatory effects shaping innate and adaptive responses. Studies of murine cytomegalovirus (MCMV) infections have helped elucidate the mechanisms inducing, as well as the elicited soluble and cellular networks contributing to, innate immunity. Specialized receptors are engaged by infection-induced structures to stimulate production of key innate cytokines. These then stimulate cytokine and cellular responses such as activation of natural killer (NK) cells to mediate elevated killing by type 1 interferon (IFN) and/or to produce the pro-inflammatory and antiviral cytokine IFN-γ by interleukin 12 (IL-12). An inter-systemic loop, with IL-6 inducing glucocorticoid release, negatively regulates these early cytokine responses. As infections advance into periods of overlapping innate and adaptive responses, however, the cells are intrinsically conditioned to modify the biological effects of exposure to individual cytokines. Some pathways are turned off to inhibit an existing, whereas others are broadened for acquisition of a new, response function. Remarkably, extended NK cell proliferation during MCMV infection is associated with epigenetic modifications shifting the state of the inhibitory cytokine IL-10 gene from closed to open and results in their becoming equipped to produce this cytokine. When induced, NK cell IL-10 negatively regulates the magnitude of adaptive responses to protect against immune pathology. Thus, innate immunoregulatory cytokine networks are integral to pro-inflammatory and defense functions, but responding cells have the flexibility to undergo cell intrinsic conditioning with changing network characteristics to result in a new negative immunoregulatory function, and consequently, both promote beneficial and limit detrimental immune responses.