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1.
J Biomed Sci ; 30(1): 49, 2023 Jun 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37381064

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The inflammatory response is indispensable for protective immunity, yet microbial pathogens often trigger an excessive response, 'cytokine storm', harmful to the host. Full T-cell activation requires interaction of costimulatory receptors B7-1(CD80) and B7-2(CD86) expressed on antigen-presenting cells with CD28 expressed on the T cells. We created short peptide mimetics of the homodimer interfaces of the B7 and CD28 receptors and examined their ability to attenuate B7/CD28 coligand engagement and signaling through CD28 for inflammatory cytokine induction in human immune cells, and to protect from lethal toxic shock in vivo. METHODS: Short B7 and CD28 receptor dimer interface mimetic peptides were synthesized and tested for their ability to attenuate the inflammatory cytokine response of human peripheral blood mononuclear cells, as well as for their ability to attenuate B7/CD28 intercellular receptor engagement. Mice were used to test the ability of such peptides to protect from lethal superantigen toxin challenge when administered in molar doses far below the toxin dose. RESULTS: B7 and CD28 homodimer interfaces are remote from the coligand binding sites, yet our finding is that by binding back into the receptor dimer interfaces, short dimer interface mimetic peptides inhibit intercellular B7-2/CD28 as well as the tighter B7-1/CD28 engagement, attenuating thereby pro-inflammatory signaling. B7 mimetic peptides exhibit tight selectivity for the cognate receptor in inhibiting intercellular receptor engagement with CD28, yet each diminishes signaling through CD28. In a prominent example of inflammatory cytokine storm, by attenuating formation of the B7/CD28 costimulatory axis, B7-1 and CD28 dimer interface mimetic peptides protect mice from lethal toxic shock induced by a bacterial superantigen even when administered in doses far submolar to the superantigen. CONCLUSIONS: Our results reveal that the B7 and CD28 homodimer interfaces each control B7/CD28 costimulatory receptor engagement and highlight the protective potential against cytokine storm of attenuating, yet not ablating, pro-inflammatory signaling via these receptor domains.


Subject(s)
CD28 Antigens , Shock, Septic , Humans , Animals , Mice , Leukocytes, Mononuclear , Cell Adhesion Molecules , Cytokine Release Syndrome , Cytokines , Polymers , Superantigens
2.
Front Genet ; 10: 464, 2019.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31139209

ABSTRACT

A critical step in the cellular stress response is transient activation of the RNA-dependent protein kinase PKR by double-helical RNA, resulting in down-regulation of protein synthesis through phosphorylation of the α chain of translation initiation factor eIF2, a major PKR substrate. However, intragenic elements of 100-200 nucleotides in length within primary transcripts of cellular genes, exemplified by the tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-α gene and fetal and adult globin genes, are capable of forming RNA structures that potently activate PKR and thereby strongly enhance mRNA splicing efficiency. By inducing nuclear eIF2α phosphorylation, these PKR activator elements enable highly efficient early spliceosome assembly yet do not impair translation of the mature spliced mRNA. The TNF-α RNA activator of PKR folds into a compact pseudoknot that is highly conserved within the phylogeny. Upon excision of ß-globin first intron, the RNA activator of PKR, located in exon 1, is silenced through strand displacement by a short sequence within exon 2, restricting thereby the ability to activate PKR to the splicing process without impeding subsequent synthesis of ß-globin essential for survival. This activator/silencer mechanism likewise controls splicing of α-globin pre-mRNA, but the exonic locations of PKR activator and silencer sequences are reversed, demonstrating evolutionary flexibility. Impaired splicing efficiency may underlie numerous human ß-thalassemia mutations that map to the ß-globin RNA activator of PKR or its silencer. Even where such mutations change the encoded amino acid sequence during subsequent translation, they carry the potential of first impairing PKR-dependent mRNA splicing or shutoff of PKR activation needed for optimal translation.

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