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April
27, 2005
Medical Researchers Show Protein’s Role
In Stopping Bacterial-Induced Inflammation
By Sue Pondrom
In findings that
could have implications for autoimmune disorders and drug-resistant
bacterial infections, researchers at the UCSD School of Medicine
have identified a key protein involved in the appropriate shut-down
of inflammation following an immune response to invading pathogens.
Published in the April
28, 2005 issue of the journal Nature, the study in
mice and lab cultures of immune cells called macrophages showed
that a protein called I-kappa-B kinase alpha (IKKa) is responsible
for terminating an inflammatory response before it can damage
cells and organs.
Senior author Michael
Karin, Ph.D., UCSD professor of pharmacology, explained that
IKKa is part of a sophisticated two-punch system that maintains
a proper inflammatory response. While it is well known that
IKKa’s sister protein, IKK beta (IKKb), initiates the
inflammatory response, little was known about the mechanism
for stopping the response before it injures tissue, such as
the damage that occurs in chronic bacterial and parasitic infections
like tuberculosis and leprosy, or in autoimmune disorders like
rheumatoid arthritis, multiple sclerosis, and systemic lupus
erythematosus (SLE).
Karin’s team,
which was the first to identify the IKK protein complex in 1996,
determined in this new investigation that both IKKa and IKKb
are activated at the same time following a microbial infection.
While IKKb initiates the inflammatory response by causing the
degradation of inhibitory proteins called IkBs, IKKa interacts
with two additional proteins – RelA and C-Rel –
which move into the nucleus of the cell after the IkBs are degraded.
After being “tagged” by IKKa in the cytoplasm of
the cell, RelA and c-Rel bind to genes that mediate the inflammatory
response. But their life is limited – the IKKa-mediated
“tag” ensures that RelA and c-Rel will bind to their
target genes for only a short duration. Once RelA and c-Rel
are removed from their target genes, the inflammatory response
is terminated.
“This is very
important for a proper inflammatory response in infection and
immunity,” Karin said. “The inflammatory response
involves the production of potentially toxic mediators, so it
is important that inflammation be allowed to do its work rapidly,
but only transiently.”
The new findings also
have implications for disorders such as flesh-eating staph infections
and drug-resistant bacterial infections that are difficult to
treat. The researchers note that in these cases, it might be
possible to develop an inhibitor of IKKa that boosts the inflammatory
response to better fight these infections. However, such an
inhibitor should have a short half-life, so that its potential
devastating effect can be properly terminated.
The Karin lab, which
has made several of the past discoveries involving IKKb’s
pro-inflammatory role, has also studied IKKa over the years,
but they have identified roles unrelated to the primary inflammatory
response. For example, in 2001, the investigators determined
that IKKa was essential formation of the skin’s outer
layer. In a follow-up study, the team found clues that IKKa
may be more involved in the immune response than they previously
thought, but its role still appeared limited. The current study
is the first, however, to specifically show the novel mechanisms
used by the protein to control the duration of an inflammatory
response.
The study was funded
by the National Institutes of Health. The co-first authors were
Toby Lawrence, Ph.D., and Magali Bebien, Ph.D., post-doctoral
fellows in the Laboratory of Gene Regulation and Signal Transduction,
UCSD Department of Pharmacology. Currently, Lawrence is an assistant
professor and member of the Faculty of Medicine, Imperial College
London. Additional authors were George Liu, Ph.D., UCSD Division
of Pediatric Infectious Diseases, UCSD School of Medicine; and
Victor Nizet, M.D., associate professor of pediatrics, UCSD
School of Medicine.
Media Contact:
Sue Pondrom (619) 543-6163
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