Publication | Open Access
A <i>TNFSF15</i> disease-risk polymorphism increases pattern-recognition receptor-induced signaling through caspase-8–induced IL-1
63
Citations
33
References
2014
Year
Immune RegulationImmunologyGenetic EpidemiologyPathologyImmune SystemImmune-related Gene PolymorphismImmune DysregulationInflammationCaspase-8–induced Il-1Soluble Tnfsf15Cell SignalingMolecular SignalingChronic InflammationAutoimmunityCell BiologyInflammatory DiseaseCytokineTnfsf15 TreatmentImmune Cell DevelopmentInflammation BiologyCytokine SecretionMedicine
Inflammatory diseases are characterized by dysregulated cytokine production. Altered functions for most risk loci, including the inflammatory bowel disease and leprosy-associated tumor necrosis factor ligand superfamily member 15 (TNFSF15) region, are unclear. Regulation of pattern-recognition-receptor (PRR)-induced signaling and cytokines is crucial for immune homeostasis; TNFSF15:death receptor 3 (DR3) contributions to PRR responses have not been described. We found that human macrophages expressed DR3 and that TNFSF15:DR3 interactions were critical for amplifying PRR-initiated MAPK/NF-κB/PI3K signaling and cytokine secretion in macrophages. Mechanisms mediating TNFSF15:DR3 contributions to PRR outcomes included TACE-induced TNFSF15 cleavage to soluble TNFSF15; soluble TNFSF15 then led to TRADD/FADD/MALT-1- and caspase-8-mediated autocrine IL-1 secretion. Notably, TNFSF15 treatment also induced cytokine secretion through a caspase-8-dependent pathway in intestinal myeloid cells. Importantly, rs6478108 A disease risk-carrier macrophages demonstrated increased TNFSF15 expression and PRR-induced signaling and cytokines. Taken together, TNFSF15:DR3 interactions amplify PRR-induced signaling and cytokines, and the rs6478108 TNFSF15 disease-risk polymorphism results in a gain of function.
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