Publication | Open Access
Hepatocyte Growth Factor Suppresses Proinflammatory NFκB Activation through GSK3β Inactivation in Renal Tubular Epithelial Cells
97
Citations
27
References
2008
Year
Renal PathologyImmune RegulationRenal InflammationImmunologyNfkappab ActivityInflammationRenal FunctionSignaling PathwayCell RegulationFibroblast Growth FactorKidney Tubule RemodelingChronic Kidney DiseaseCell SignalingLiver PhysiologyNfkappab ActivationRenal PathophysiologyInflammatory Kidney DiseaseCell BiologyProtein PhosphorylationUrologySignal TransductionGsk3β InactivationCellular BiochemistryMedicineNephrologyKidney Research
Activation of NFkappaB is a fundamental cellular event central to all inflammatory diseases. Hepatocyte growth factor (HGF) ameliorates both acute and chronic inflammation in a multitude of organ systems through modulating NFkappaB activity; nevertheless, the exact molecular mechanism remains uncertain. Here we report that HGF through inactivation of GSK3beta suppresses NFkappaB p65 phosphorylation specifically at position Ser-468. The Ser-468 of RelA/p65 situates in a GSK3beta consensus motif and could be directly phosphorylated by GSK3beta both in vivo and in vitro, signifying Ser-468 of RelA/p65 as a putative substrate for GSK3beta. In addition, the C terminus of RelA/p65 harbors a highly conserved domain homologue of the consensus docking sequence for GSK3beta. Moreover, this domain was required for efficient phosphorylation of Ser-468 and was indispensable for the physical interaction between RelA/p65 and GSK3beta. HGF substantially intercepted this interaction by inactivating GSK3beta. Functionally, phosphorylation of Ser-468 of RelA/p65 was required for the induced expression of a particular subset of proinflammatory NFkappaB-dependent genes. Diminished phosphorylation at Ser-468 by HGF resulted in a gene-specific inhibition of these genes' expression. The action of HGF on proinflammatory NFkappaB activation was consistently mimicked by a selective GSK3beta inhibitor or GSK3beta knockdown by RNA interference but largely abrogated in cells expressing the mutant uninhibitable GSK3beta. Collectively, our findings suggest that HGF has a potent suppressive effect on NFkappaB activation, which is mediated by GSK3beta, an important signaling transducer controlling RelA/p65 phosphorylation specificity and directing the transcription of selective proinflammatory cytokines implicated in inflammatory kidney disease.
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