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Publication : S100A8 induces IL-10 and protects against acute lung injury.

First Author  Hiroshima Y Year  2014
Journal  J Immunol Volume  192
Issue  6 Pages  2800-11
PubMed ID  24532576 Mgi Jnum  J:209911
Mgi Id  MGI:5568899 Doi  10.4049/jimmunol.1302556
Citation  Hiroshima Y, et al. (2014) S100A8 induces IL-10 and protects against acute lung injury. J Immunol 192(6):2800-11
abstractText  S100A8 is considered proinflammatory by activating TLR4 and/or the receptor for advanced glycation end products. The aim was to investigate inflammatory effects of S100A8 in murine lung. S100A8 was administered to BALB/c mice by nasal inhalation and genes induced over a time-course assessed. LPS was introduced intranasally either alone or 2 h after pretreatment of mice with intranasal application of S100A8 or dexamethasone. A Cys(42)-Ala(42) mutant S100A8 mutant was used to assess whether S100A8's effects were via pathways that were dependent on reactive oxygen species. S100A8 induced IL-10 mRNA, and expression was apparent only in airway epithelial cells. Importantly, it suppressed acute lung injury provoked by LPS inhalation by suppressing mast-cell activation and induction of mediators orchestrating leukocyte recruitment, possibly by reducing NF-kappaB activation via an IkappaBalpha/Akt pathway and by downmodulating pathways generating oxidative stress. The Cys(42)-Ala(42) S100A8 mutant did not induce IL-10 and was less immunosuppressive, indicating modulation by scavenging oxidants. S100A8 inhibition of LPS-mediated injury was as potent, and outcomes were remarkably similar to immunosuppression by dexamethasone. We challenge the notion that S100A8 is an agonist for TLR4 or the receptor for advanced glycation end products. S100A8 induced IL-10 in vivo and initiates a feedback loop that attenuates acute lung injury.
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