|  Help  |  About  |  Contact Us

Publication : Matricellular protein CCN1 activates a proinflammatory genetic program in murine macrophages.

First Author  Bai T Year  2010
Journal  J Immunol Volume  184
Issue  6 Pages  3223-32
PubMed ID  20164416 Mgi Jnum  J:160113
Mgi Id  MGI:4453430 Doi  10.4049/jimmunol.0902792
Citation  Bai T, et al. (2010) Matricellular protein CCN1 activates a proinflammatory genetic program in murine macrophages. J Immunol 184(6):3223-32
abstractText  CCN1 (CYR61) is a matricellular protein that is highly expressed at sites of inflammation and wound repair. In these contexts, CCN1 can modify the activities of specific cytokines, enabling TNF-alpha to be cytotoxic without blocking NF-kappaB activity and enhancing the apoptotic activity of Fas ligand and TRAIL. In this paper, we show that CCN1 supports the adhesion of macrophages through integrin alpha(M)beta(2) and syndecan-4, activates NFkappaB-mediated transcription, and induces a proinflammatory genetic program characteristic of classically activated M1 macrophages that participates in Th1 responses. The effects of CCN1 include upregulation of cytokines (TNF-alpha, IL-1alpha, IL-1beta, IL-6, and IL-12b), chemokines (MIP-1alpha; MCP-3; growth-related oncogenes 1 and 2; and inflammatory protein 10), and regulators of oxidative stress and complement (inducible NO synthase and C3) and downregulation of specific receptors (TLR4 and IL-10Rbeta) and anti-inflammatory factors (TGF-beta1). CCN1 regulates this genetic program through at least two distinct mechanisms: an immediate-early response resulting from direct activation of NF-kappaB by CCN1, leading to the synthesis of cytokines including TNF-alpha and inflammatory protein 10; and a delayed response resulting from CCN1-induced TNF-alpha, which acts as an autocrine/paracrine mediator to activate the expression of other cytokines including IL-1beta and IL-6. These results identify CCN1 as a novel component of the extracellular matrix that activates proinflammatory genes in macrophages, implicating its role in regulating macrophage function during inflammation.
Quick Links:
 
Quick Links:
 

Expression

Publication --> Expression annotations

 

Other

3 Authors

4 Bio Entities

Trail: Publication

0 Expression