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1.
Mucosal Immunol ; 13(5): 777-787, 2020 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32518365

ABSTRACT

The natural history of allergic diseases suggests bidirectional and progressive relationships between allergic disorders of the skin, lung, and gut indicative of mucosal organ crosstalk. However, impacts of local allergic inflammation on the cellular landscape of remote mucosal organs along the skin:lung:gut axis are not yet known. Eosinophils are tissue-dwelling innate immune leukocytes associated with allergic diseases. Emerging data suggest heterogeneous phenotypes of tissue-dwelling eosinophils contribute to multifaceted roles that favor homeostasis or disease. This study investigated the impact of acute local allergen exposure on the frequency and phenotype of tissue eosinophils within remote mucosal organs. Our findings demonstrate allergen challenge to skin, lung, or gut elicited not only local eosinophilic inflammation, but also increased the number and frequency of eosinophils within remote, allergen nonexposed lung, and intestine. Remote allergen-elicited lung eosinophils exhibited an inflammatory phenotype and their presence associated with enhanced susceptibility to airway inflammation induced upon subsequent inhalation of a different allergen. These data demonstrate, for the first time, a direct effect of acute allergic inflammation on the phenotype and frequency of tissue eosinophils within antigen nonexposed remote mucosal tissues associated with remote organ priming for allergic inflammation.


Subject(s)
Allergens/immunology , Environmental Exposure , Eosinophils/immunology , Eosinophils/metabolism , Hypersensitivity/etiology , Hypersensitivity/metabolism , Mucous Membrane/immunology , Mucous Membrane/metabolism , Animals , Biomarkers , Disease Models, Animal , Disease Susceptibility , Environmental Exposure/adverse effects , Hypersensitivity/pathology , Immunophenotyping , Lung/immunology , Lung/metabolism , Lung/pathology , Mice , Mucous Membrane/pathology , Organ Specificity/genetics , Organ Specificity/immunology
2.
Immunology ; 154(2): 298-308, 2018 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29281125

ABSTRACT

Intestinal eosinophils are implicated in homeostatic and disease-associated processes, yet the phenotype of intestinal tissue-dwelling eosinophils is poorly defined and their roles in intestinal health or disease remain enigmatic. Here we probed the phenotype and localization of eosinophils constitutively homed to the small intestine of naive mice at baseline, and of antigen-sensitized mice following intestinal challenge. Eosinophils homed to the intestinal lamina propria of naive mice were phenotypically distinguished from autologous blood eosinophils, and constitutively expressed antigen-presenting cell markers, suggesting that intestinal eosinophils, unlike blood eosinophils, may be primed for antigen presentation. We further identified a previously unrecognized resident population of CD11chi eosinophils that are recovered with intraepithelial leucocytes, and that are phenotypically distinct from both lamina propria and blood eosinophils. To better visualize intestinal eosinophils in situ, we generated eosinophil reporter mice wherein green fluorescent protein expression is targeted to both granule-delimiting and plasma membranes. Analyses of deconvolved fluorescent z-section image stacks of intestinal tissue sections from eosinophil reporter mice revealed eosinophils within intestinal villi exhibited dendritic morphologies with cellular extensions that often contacted the basement membrane. Using an in vivo model of antigen acquisition in antigen-sensitized mice, we demonstrate that both lamina propria-associated and intraepithelium-associated eosinophils encounter, and are competent to acquire, lumen-derived antigen. Taken together these data provide new foundational insights into the organization and functional potential of intestinal tissue-dwelling eosinophils, including the recognition of different subsets of resident intestinal eosinophils, and constitutive expression of antigen-presenting cell markers.


Subject(s)
Antigen Presentation/immunology , Biomarkers , Eosinophils/immunology , Eosinophils/metabolism , Intestinal Mucosa/immunology , Intestinal Mucosa/metabolism , Phenotype , Animals , Antigen-Presenting Cells/immunology , Antigen-Presenting Cells/metabolism , Eosinophils/pathology , Female , Fluorescent Antibody Technique , Immunophenotyping , Intestinal Mucosa/pathology , Intraepithelial Lymphocytes/immunology , Intraepithelial Lymphocytes/metabolism , Leukocytes/immunology , Leukocytes/metabolism , Mice , Mice, Transgenic
3.
Am J Physiol Cell Physiol ; 306(8): C762-7, 2014 Apr 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24553183

ABSTRACT

The muscle-specific ring finger protein 1 (MuRF1) gene is required for most types of skeletal muscle atrophy yet we have little understanding of its transcriptional regulation. The purpose of this study is to identify whether NF-κB and/or FoxO response elements in the MuRF1 promoter are required for MuRF1 gene activation during skeletal muscle atrophy due to the removal of hindlimb weight bearing ("unloading"). Both NF-κB -dependent and FoxO-dependent luciferase reporter activities were significantly increased at 5 days of unloading. Using a 4.4-kb MuRF1 promoter reporter construct, a fourfold increase in reporter (i.e., luciferase) activity was found in rat soleus muscles after 5 days of hindlimb unloading. This activation was abolished by mutagenesis of either of the two distal putative NF-κB sites or all three putative NF-κB sites but not by mutagenesis of all four putative FoxO sites. This work provides the first direct evidence that NF-κB sites, but not FoxO sites, are required for MuRF1 promoter activation in muscle disuse atrophy in vivo.


Subject(s)
Forkhead Transcription Factors/metabolism , Muscle Proteins/metabolism , Muscular Atrophy/metabolism , NF-kappa B/metabolism , Transcriptional Activation/physiology , Ubiquitin-Protein Ligases/metabolism , Animals , Female , Forkhead Transcription Factors/genetics , Hindlimb Suspension , Muscle Proteins/genetics , NF-kappa B/genetics , Promoter Regions, Genetic , Rats , Tripartite Motif Proteins , Ubiquitin-Protein Ligases/genetics
4.
PLoS One ; 9(1): e87776, 2014.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24489962

ABSTRACT

Existing data suggest that NF-kappaB signaling is a key regulator of cancer-induced skeletal muscle wasting. However, identification of the components of this signaling pathway and of the NF-κB transcription factors that regulate wasting is far from complete. In muscles of C26 tumor bearing mice, overexpression of dominant negative (d.n.) IKKß blocked muscle wasting by 69% and the IκBα-super repressor blocked wasting by 41%. In contrast, overexpression of d.n. IKKα or d.n. NIK did not block C26-induced wasting. Surprisingly, overexpression of d.n. p65 or d.n. c-Rel did not significantly affect muscle wasting. Genome-wide mRNA expression arrays showed upregulation of many genes previously implicated in muscle atrophy. To test if these upregulated genes were direct targets of NF-κB transcription factors, we compared genome-wide p65 binding to DNA in control and cachectic muscle using ChIP-sequencing. Bioinformatic analysis of ChIP-sequencing data from control and C26 muscles showed very little p65 binding to genes in cachexia and little to suggest that upregulated p65 binding influences the gene expression associated with muscle based cachexia. The p65 ChIP-seq data are consistent with our finding of no significant change in protein binding to an NF-κB oligonucleotide in a gel shift assay, no activation of a NF-κB-dependent reporter, and no effect of d.n.p65 overexpression in muscles of tumor bearing mice. Taken together, these data support the idea that although inhibition of IκBα, and particularly IKKß, blocks cancer-induced wasting, the alternative NF-κB signaling pathway is not required. In addition, the downstream NF-κB transcription factors, p65 and c-Rel do not appear to regulate the transcriptional changes induced by the C26 tumor. These data are consistent with the growing body of literature showing that there are NF-κB-independent substrates of IKKß and IκBα that regulate physiological processes.


Subject(s)
Adenocarcinoma/metabolism , Cachexia/metabolism , I-kappa B Kinase/metabolism , Muscular Atrophy/metabolism , Transcription Factor RelA/metabolism , Animals , Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic , Gene Ontology , Male , Mice , Muscle, Skeletal/metabolism , Muscle, Skeletal/pathology , Neoplasm Transplantation , Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis , Transcriptome
5.
Exp Physiol ; 98(1): 19-24, 2013 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22848079

ABSTRACT

The nuclear factor-κB (NF-κB) signalling pathway is a necessary component of adult skeletal muscle atrophy resulting from systemic illnesses or disuse. Studies showing a role for the NF-κB pathway in muscle disuse include unloading, denervation and immobilization, and studies showing a role for NF-κB in systemic illnesses include cancer, chronic heart failure and acute septic lung injury. Muscle atrophy due to most of these triggers is associated with activation of NF-κB transcriptional activity. With the exception of muscle unloading, however, there is a paucity of data on the NF-κB transcription factors that regulate muscle atrophy, and little is known about which genes are targeted by NF-κB transcription factors during atrophy. Interestingly, in some cases it appears that the amelioration of muscle atrophy by genetic inhibition of NF-κB signalling proteins is due to effects that are independent of the downstream NF-κB transcription factors. These questions are prime areas for investigation if we are to understand a key component of muscle wasting in adult skeletal muscle.


Subject(s)
Muscular Atrophy/metabolism , NF-kappa B/physiology , Signal Transduction/physiology , Adult , Animals , Gene Expression Regulation , Humans , Mice , Muscle, Skeletal/pathology , Muscular Atrophy/pathology , Signal Transduction/drug effects , Transcription Factors/physiology , Transcriptional Activation/physiology
6.
Exp Cell Res ; 315(19): 3242-9, 2009 Nov 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19732770

ABSTRACT

The microtubule cytoskeleton is known to play a role in cell structure and serve as a scaffold for a variety of active molecules in processes as diverse as motility and cell division. The literature on the role of microtubules in signal transduction, however, is marked by inconsistencies. We have investigated a well-studied signaling pathway, TNF-alpha-induced NF-kappaB activation, and found a connection between the stability of microtubules and the regulation of NF-kappaB signaling in C2C12 myotubes. When microtubules are stabilized by paclitaxel (taxol), there is a strong induction of NF-kappaB even in the absence of TNF-alpha . Although there was no additive effect of taxol and TNF-alpha on NF-kappaB activity suggesting a shared mechanism of activation, taxol strongly induced the NF-kappaB reporter in the presence of a TNF receptor (TNFR) blocking antibody while TNF-alpha did not. Both TNF-alpha and taxol induce the degradation of endogenous IkappaBalpha and either taxol or TNF-alpha induction of NF-kappaB activity was blocked by inhibitors of NF-kappaB acting at different sites in the signaling pathway. Both TNF-alpha and taxol strongly induce known NF-kappaB chemokine target genes. On the other hand, if microtubules are destabilized by colchicine, then the induction of NF-kappaB by TNF-alpha or taxol is greatly reduced. Taken together, we surmise that the activity of microtubules is at the level of the TNFR intracellular domain. This phenomenon may indicate a new level of signaling organization in cell biology, actively created by the state of the cytoskeleton, and has ramifications for therapies where microtubule regulating drugs are used.


Subject(s)
Microtubules/physiology , NF-kappa B/metabolism , Signal Transduction , Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha/metabolism , Cell Line , Cytoskeleton , Humans , Paclitaxel/pharmacology , Receptors, Tumor Necrosis Factor/metabolism , Tubulin Modulators/pharmacology
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