Abstract
N. meningitidis induces extensive gene expression changes in human monocytes, suggesting that complex networks of signaling pathways are activated during meningococcal sepsis. These effects are modulated by the anti-inflammatory cytokine interleukin-10 (IL-10). To further study changes in signal transduction suggested by mRNA data, we used kinase substrate arrays to identify composite kinase activities induced by lysates from a primary human monocyte model system. Cell lysates were prepared from monocytes treated with the following experimental conditions: 106 N. meningitidis/mL, 25 ng/mL IL-10, 106 N. meningitidis/mL in combination with 25 ng/mL IL-10, and vehicle. Lysates were subjected to kinase activity profiling with Tyrosine Kinase PamChip® arrays containing 144 kinase peptide substrates. In our experimental model, we were not able to detect a statistically significant large-scale change in ex vivo array peptide phosphorylation by lysates from monocytes treated for 15 minutes. Targets of the IL-10 anti-inflammatory response were not identified. A profound inhibition of array peptide phosphorylation by monocytes treated for 60 minutes was identified, suggesting low activity of a large number of kinases associated with different signaling pathways and immune cell functions, including STAT3 activity, Nf-κB and VEGF signaling, and PTEN signaling activity. The peptide representing ZBTB16, which was reduced in phosphorylation by lysates from all three experimental conditions, was in Ingenuity Pathway Analysis identified to be linked to reduced cytokine release and mRNA levels of tumor necrosis factor (TNF), IL-6, and CXCL10. Further studies should investigate changes in tyrosine kinase-mediated signal transduction in human immune cells, in order to evaluate the potential clinical application of kinome profiling in the study of systemic inflammatory responses to pathogens.
Highlights
Meningococcal sepsis is an overwhelming form of the sepsis syndrome which may cause mortality within 12–24 hours in previously healthy children and adults [1]
We measured tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-levels in the supernatants after 15 and 60 minutes to evaluate whether monocytes from the eight donors were activated by N. meningitidis and inhibited by IL-10 during the incubation (Figs 1 and 2)
After 60 minutes, a significant increase (P
Summary
Meningococcal sepsis is an overwhelming form of the sepsis syndrome which may cause mortality within 12–24 hours in previously healthy children and adults [1]. Extensive gene expression changes in monocytes are induced by plasma from patients with meningococcal sepsis [6]. The gene expression results suggest that complex networks of signaling pathways are activated and inhibited during meningococcal sepsis. This is in line with a number of other studies over the past decade investigating transcriptomic changes in immune cells from patients with various forms of sepsis [10,11,12]. Studies using proteomic methods should follow up transcriptomic studies
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