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Get Free AccessIn innate immunity, microbial components stimulate macrophages to produce antimicrobial substances, cytokines, other proinflammatory mediators, and IFNs via TLRs, which trigger signaling pathways activating NF-kappaB, MAPKs, and IFN response factors. We show in this study that, in contrast to its activating role in T cells, in macrophages the protein phosphatase calcineurin negatively regulates NF-kappaB, MAPKs, and IFN response factor activation by inhibiting the TLR-mediated signaling pathways. Evidence for this novel role for calcineurin was provided by the findings that these signaling pathways are activated when calcineurin is inhibited either by the inhibitors cyclosporin A or FK506 or by small interfering RNA-targeting calcineurin, and that activation of these pathways by TLR ligands is inhibited by the overexpression of a constitutively active form of calcineurin. We further found that IkappaB-alpha degradation, MAPK activation, and TNF-alpha production by FK506 were reduced in macrophages from mice deficient in MyD88, Toll/IL-1R domain-containing adaptor-inducing IFN-beta (TRIF), TLR2, or TLR4, whereas macrophages from TLR3-deficient or TLR9 mutant mice showed the same responses to FK506 as those of wild-type cells. Biochemical studies indicate that calcineurin interacts with MyD88, TRIF, TLR2, and TLR4, but not with TLR3 or TLR9. Collectively, these results suggest that calcineurin negatively regulates TLR-mediated activation pathways in macrophages by inhibiting the adaptor proteins MyD88 and TRIF, and a subset of TLRs.
Young Jun Kang, Brenda Kusler, Motoyuki Otsuka, Michael Hughes, Nobutaka Suzuki, Shinobu Suzuki, Wen‐Chen Yeh, Akira Shizuo, Jiahuai Han, Patricia P. Jones (2007). Calcineurin Negatively Regulates TLR-Mediated Activation Pathways. The Journal of Immunology, 179(7), pp. 4598-4607, DOI: 10.4049/jimmunol.179.7.4598.
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Type
Article
Year
2007
Authors
10
Datasets
0
Total Files
0
Language
English
Journal
The Journal of Immunology
DOI
10.4049/jimmunol.179.7.4598
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