Abstract

BackgroundThe cytokine tumor necrosis factor (TNF) initiates tissue inflammation, a process mediated by the NF-κB transcription factor. In response to TNF, latent cytoplasmic NF-κB is activated, enters the nucleus, and induces expression of inflammatory and anti-apoptotic gene expression programs. Recently it has been shown that NF-κB displays two distinct activation modes, monophasic and oscillatory, depending on stimulus duration. Characterization of temporal expression patterns for the NF-κB network and determination of those genes under monophasic- or oscillatory control has not been experimentally addressed.ResultsTo identify the kinetics of NF-κB-dependent gene expression and determine whether these two types of NF-κB translocation modes control distinct gene programs, a detailed kinetic analysis of a validated microarray data set was performed on 74 unique NF-κB-dependent genes in response to TNF. Hierarchical clustering identified distinct expression profiles termed the "Early", "Middle", "Late" response groups, peaking 1, 3, and 6 h after stimulation, respectively. These expression patterns were validated by Quantitative Real Time PCR (Q-RT-PCR) and NF-κB binding was demonstrated by chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) assays. Each response group was mapped to its molecular function; this analysis indicated that the Early group encodes cytokines or negative regulators of the IKK-NF-κB pathway, and the Late group encodes cell surface receptors, adhesion molecules and signal adapters. That similar coordinated sequential cascades of gene expression were also seen in response to stimulation by the cytokine IL-1, and expression patterns observed in MRC-5 fibroblasts indicated that the epithelial NF-κB program is relatively stimulus- and cell type-independent. Bioinformatic analysis of the Early and Late gene promoters indicates that although both groups contain similar patterns of NF-κB-binding sites, only the Early gene promoters contain NF-κB-binding sites located in phylogenetically conserved domains. Stimulation protocols designed to produce either monophasic or oscillatory NF-κB activation modes showed that the oscillatory mode is required only for expression of the Late genes.ConclusionThis analysis provides important insights into the TNF-regulated genetic response program in epithelial cells, where NF-κB controls sequential expression patterns of functionally distinct genes that depend on its oscillatory activation mode.

Highlights

  • The cytokine tumor necrosis factor (TNF) initiates tissue inflammation, a process mediated by the Nuclear Factor-κB (NF-κB) transcription factor

  • We found that the P values for the two-tailed test statistic for Early gene group is significantly different than the profiles of the Middle or Late genes at all times of TNF stimulation, indicating that they come from a distinct population than the members of the Middle or Late genes

  • The IKK-NF-κB pathway is critical for inducing tissue inflammation and preventing TNF-induced programmed cell death, surprisingly little is known about its downstream gene targets and their kinetics of induction

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The cytokine tumor necrosis factor (TNF) initiates tissue inflammation, a process mediated by the NF-κB transcription factor. In response to TNF, latent cytoplasmic NF-κB is activated, enters the nucleus, and induces expression of inflammatory and anti-apoptotic gene expression programs. Tumor necrosis factor (TNFα, TNF ligand superfamily 2 [TNFSF2]) is a prototypical inflammatory and immunomodulatory cytokine inducibly expressed by activated macrophages, monocytes, neutrophils, T-cells and NKcells [1]. [3]) that serve as an anchor to recruit signaling proteins binding to the death domains on the cytoplasmic receptor tails. Upon assembly of this submembranous complex, two major downstream signaling pathways are activated; these are the jun NH2 terminal kinase -activating protein-1- and the IκB Kinase (IKK)-Nuclear Factor-κB (NF-κB) pathways [4,5]. Signalinduced IκB proteolysis is mediated by activation of the multiprotein cytoplasmic IKK (a.k.a., the "signalsome"ref. [8]), a kinase that phosphorylates IκB in its NH2-regulatory domain, making it a substrate for proteolysis through the 26S proteasome and calpain pathways [8,9]

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call