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Publication : Zymosan activates protein kinase A via adenylyl cyclase VII to modulate innate immune responses during inflammation.

First Author  Jiang LI Year  2013
Journal  Mol Immunol Volume  54
Issue  1 Pages  14-22
PubMed ID  23178822 Mgi Jnum  J:191067
Mgi Id  MGI:5460917 Doi  10.1016/j.molimm.2012.10.027
Citation  Jiang LI, et al. (2013) Zymosan activates protein kinase A via adenylyl cyclase VII to modulate innate immune responses during inflammation. Mol Immunol 54(1):14-22
abstractText  Pathogens use a variety of strategies to evade host immune defenses. A powerful way to suppress immune function is to increase intracellular concentrations of cAMP in host immune cells, which dampens inflammatory responses and prevents microbial killing. We found that the yeast cell wall extract, zymosan, is capable of increasing intracellular cAMP and activates the protein kinase A pathway in bone marrow derived macrophage (BMDM) cells from mice. This response is dependent on adenylyl cyclase type VII (AC7) and heterotrimeric G proteins, primarily G(12/13). Consequently, zymosan induced production of the inflammatory cytokine, TNFalpha, was much stronger in BMDMs from AC7 deficient mice compared to the response in wild type cells. In a model of zymosan induced peritonitis, mice deficient of AC7 in the myeloid lineage displayed prolonged inflammation. We propose that zymosan induced increases in cAMP and activation of PKA serve as a mechanism to dampen inflammatory responses in host cells, which consequently favors the survival of microbes. This would also help explain a well documented phenomenon, that the ability of zymosan to stimulate inflammatory cytokine responses via TLR2 appears to be weaker than other stimuli of TLR2.
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