[HTML][HTML] Regulation of the innate immune response by fibronectin: synergism between the III-1 and EDA domains

R Kelsh, R You, C Horzempa, M Zheng… - PloS one, 2014 - journals.plos.org
R Kelsh, R You, C Horzempa, M Zheng, PJ McKeown-Longo
PloS one, 2014journals.plos.org
Fibronectin is a critical component of the extracellular matrix and alterations to its structure
will influence cellular behavior. Matrix fibronectin is subjected to both mechanical and
biochemical regulation. The Type III domains of fibronectin can be unfolded in response to
increased cellular contractility, included or excluded from the molecule by alternative
splicing mechanisms, or released from the matrix by proteolysis. Using Inflammatory
Cytokine microarrays we found that the alternatively spliced fibronectin Type III domain …
Fibronectin is a critical component of the extracellular matrix and alterations to its structure will influence cellular behavior. Matrix fibronectin is subjected to both mechanical and biochemical regulation. The Type III domains of fibronectin can be unfolded in response to increased cellular contractility, included or excluded from the molecule by alternative splicing mechanisms, or released from the matrix by proteolysis. Using Inflammatory Cytokine microarrays we found that the alternatively spliced fibronectin Type III domain, FnEDA, and the partially unfolded III-1 domain, FnIII-1c, induced the expression of a multitude of pro-inflammatory cytokines in human dermal fibroblasts, most notably CXCL1-3, IL-8 and TNF-α. FnIII-1c, a peptide representing an unfolded intermediate structure of the first Type III domain has been shown to initiate the toll-like receptor-4 (TLR4)-NFκB-dependent release of cytokines from human dermal fibroblasts (You, et al., J. Biol. Chem., 2010). Here we demonstrate that FnIII-1c and the alternatively spliced FnEDA domain induce a TLR4 dependent activation of p38 MAP kinase and its downstream effector, MAPKAP Kinase-2 (MK-2), to regulate cytokine expression in fibroblasts. RT-qPCR analysis indicated that the p38-MK-2 pathway regulates IL-8 mRNA stability. Interestingly, addition of FnIII-1c and FnEDA synergistically enhanced TLR4-dependent IL-8 release. These data indicate that Fn contains two Type III domains which can activate TLR signaling to induce an inflammatory response in fibroblasts. Furthermore, our data identifies the NF-κB and p38/MK2 signaling pathways as transducers of signals initiated in response to structural changes in fibronectin.
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