|  Help  |  About  |  Contact Us

Publication : TLR ligands up-regulate Trex1 expression in murine conventional dendritic cells through type I Interferon and NF-κB-dependent signaling pathways.

First Author  Xu J Year  2014
Journal  J Leukoc Biol Volume  96
Issue  1 Pages  93-103
PubMed ID  24598055 Mgi Jnum  J:219043
Mgi Id  MGI:5619426 Doi  10.1189/jlb.2A0713-393RR
Citation  Xu J, et al. (2014) TLR ligands up-regulate Trex1 expression in murine conventional dendritic cells through type I Interferon and NF-kappaB-dependent signaling pathways. J Leukoc Biol 96(1):93-103
abstractText  Mutations in the Trex1 are associated with a spectrum of type I IFN-dependent autoimmune diseases. Trex1 plays an essential role in preventing accumulation of excessive cytoplasmic DNA, avoiding cell-intrinsic innate DNA sensor activation and suppressing activation of type I IFN-stimulated and -independent antiviral genes. Trex1 also helps HIV to escape cytoplasmic detection by DNA sensors. However, regulation of Trex1 in innate immune cells remains elusive. We report that murine cDCs have high constitutive expression of Trex1 in vitro and in vivo in the spleen. In resting bone marrow-derived cDCs, type I IFNs up-regulate Trex1 expression via the IFNAR-mediated signaling pathway (STAT1- and STAT2-dependent). DC activation induced by TLR3, -4, -7, and -9 ligands also augments Trex1 expression through autocrine IFN-beta production and triggering of the IFN signaling pathway, whereas TLR4 ligand LPS also stimulates an early expression of Trex1 through IFN-independent NF-kappaB-dependent signaling pathway. Furthermore, retroviral infection also induces Trex1 up-regulation in cDCs, as we found that a gene therapy HIV-1-based lentiviral vector induces significant Trex1 expression, suggesting that Trex1 may affect local and systemic administration of gene-therapy vehicles. Our data indicate that Trex1 is induced in cDCs during activation upon IFN and TLR stimulation through the canonical IFN signaling pathway and suggest that Trex1 may play a role in DC activation during infection and autoimmunity. Finally, these results suggest that HIV-like viruses may up-regulate Trex1 to increase their ability to escape immunosurveillance.
Quick Links:
 
Quick Links:
 

Expression

Publication --> Expression annotations

 

Other

14 Bio Entities

Trail: Publication

0 Expression