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Modulation of miR-155 and miR-125b Levels following Lipopolysaccharide/TNF-α Stimulation and Their Possible Roles in Regulating the Response to Endotoxin Shock

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2007

Year

TLDR

The study investigates the roles of miR‑155 and miR‑125b in innate immune responses. LPS stimulation up‑regulates miR‑155 and down‑regulates miR‑125b in macrophages and mice, with oscillatory TNF‑α‑dependent changes blocked by MG‑132, and functional studies show miR‑155 targets FADD, IKKε, and Ripk1 to enhance TNF‑α translation while miR‑125b suppresses TNF‑α mRNA, leading to heightened TNF‑α production and septic‑shock sensitivity in miR‑155 transgenic mice, suggesting these miRNAs are key regulators of endotoxin shock.

Abstract

Abstract We report here that miR-155 and miR-125b play a role in innate immune response. LPS stimulation of mouse Raw 264.7 macrophages resulted in the up-regulation of miR-155 and down-regulation of miR-125b levels. The same changes also occurred when C57BL/6 mice were i.p. injected with LPS. Furthermore, the levels of miR-155 and miR-125b in Raw 264.7 cells displayed oscillatory changes in response to TNF-α. These changes were impaired by pretreating the cells with the proteasome inhibitor MG-132, suggesting that these two microRNAs (miRNAs) may be at least transiently under the direct control of NF-κB transcriptional activity. We show that miR-155 most probably directly targets transcript coding for several proteins involved in LPS signaling such as the Fas-associated death domain protein (FADD), IκB kinase ε (IKKε), and the receptor (TNFR superfamily)-interacting serine-threonine kinase 1 (Ripk1) while enhancing TNF-α translation. In contrast, miR-125b targets the 3′-untranslated region of TNF-α transcripts; therefore, its down-regulation in response to LPS may be required for proper TNF-α production. Finally, Eμ-miR-155 transgenic mice produced higher levels of TNF-α when exposed to LPS and were hypersensitive to LPS/d-galactosamine-induced septic shock. Altogether, our data suggest that the LPS/TNF-α-dependent regulation of miR-155 and miR-125b may be implicated in the response to endotoxin shock, thus offering new targets for drug design.

References

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