scholarly journals Dimethyl Fumarate Induces Cytoprotection and Inhibits Inflammation and Vaso-Occlusion in Transgenic Sickle Mice

Blood ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 124 (21) ◽  
pp. 219-219 ◽  
Author(s):  
John D. Belcher ◽  
Julia Nguyen ◽  
Chunsheng Chen ◽  
Fuad Abdulla ◽  
Phong Nguyen ◽  
...  

Abstract Patients with sickle cell disease have unrelenting hemolysis leading to the release of hemoglobin and heme into the vasculature that promote oxidative stress, inflammation, vaso-occlusive pain crises, ischemia-reperfusion injury and organ damage. Induction of the cytoprotective heme metabolizing enzyme heme oxygenase-1 (HO-1), the iron-binding protein ferritin heavy chain or administration of the HO-1 metabolite CO induces cytoprotective responses that inhibit oxidative stress, inflammation, vaso-occlusion and organ damage in transgenic sickle mice expressing human βS globins. The master regulator of these anti-oxidative and cytoprotective responses is nuclear factor erythroid 2-related factor (Nrf2). Nrf2 activity is controlled, in part, by the cytosolic protein, kelch-like ECH-associated protein 1 (Keap1). Nrf2 is anchored in the cytoplasm through binding with Keap1 which results in its ubiquitination and subsequent proteosomal degradation. Upon exposure to stress stimuli, such as reactive oxygen species and electrophiles, Nrf2 is stabilized and able to translocate to the nucleus where it trans-activates target genes that possess an antioxidant responsive element (ARE) in their promoter regions. Recently the FDA and their European and Canadian counterparts approved dimethyl fumarate (Tecfidera) for the treatment of relapsing multiple sclerosis. Dimethyl fumarate (DMF) and its metabolite monomethyl fumarate alkylate a critical reactive thiol Cys-151 on Keap1 causing release of Nrf2, nuclear localization and activation of cellular anti-oxidant and cytoprotective responses. Based on our previous results showing cytoprotection through HO-1 and it products, we evaluated DMF responses in NY1DD transgenic sickle mice. DMF (15mg/kg) or vehicle (0.08% methyl cellulose) was administered by oral gavage BID X 3 days to NY1DD mice. On the first day of treatment, mice were implanted with dorsal skin-fold chambers. One hour after the last treatment, 20-30 flowing subcutaneous venules were selected and mapped in the dorsal skin-fold chamber window followed by infusion of heme (3.2 µmols/kg) into the tail vein. All of the selected venules were re-examined at 1 and 4 hours post-infusion and the number of static (no flow) venules were counted and expressed as percent stasis. After the 4 hour stasis measurement, blood was collected and organs were removed and flash frozen. In sickle mice treated with vehicle, microvascular stasis was 29% and 24% at 1 and 4 hours, respectively (Fig. 1). In contrast, in sickle mice treated with DMF, stasis was 6% and 4% at 1 and 4 hours (p<0.001). There also was a marked increase in nuclear Nrf2 in liver nuclear extracts of DMF-treated sickle mice on Western blots. Analysis of liver mRNA by qRT-PCR revealed that there was a 2.4 to 4.4-fold enrichment of mRNA coding for putative Nrf2-responsive antioxidant proteins in DMF-treated sickle mice compared to vehicle treated mice (Table 1). This was accompanied by a 3.3-fold increase in HO-1 activity (p<0.05), a distinct increase in cytoplasmic ferritin heavy chain on Western blot and a marked decrease in nuclear NF-κB phospho-p65 activation on Western blot of liver nuclear extracts of DMF treated sickle mice versus vehicle controls. Red blood cells and white blood cells isolated from DMF-treated sickle mice had significantly decreased adhesion to resting and heme- and TNF-activated HUVEC compared to blood cells from mice treated with vehicle. We conclude that DMF may be an effective agent to prevent sickle crises through induction of HO-1, ferritin and other antioxidant proteins, and inhibition of vaso-occlusion. These data combined with prior evidence that monomethyl fumarate can induce hemoglobin F make it an idea candidate for clinical trials in SCD patients. Table 1 Enrichment of mRNA for Antioxidant Proteins in DMF-treated Livers mRNA Fold enrichment P value HO-1 2.4 0.08 Hemopexin 2.5 0.023 Ferritin Heavy Chain 2.6 <0.001 Haptoglobin 2.7 0.046 Nrf2 2.7 0.004 Ferroportin 3.1 <0.001 Glutamate—Cysteine Ligase Catalytic Subunit 3.3 <0.001 Glutathione S-Transferase A2 3.4 0.032 NAD(P)H Dehydrogenase [Quinone] 1 3.8 0.008 Glutathione S-Transferase Mu 1 3.8 <0.001 Multidrug Resistance-associated Protein 2 4.4 <0.001 Figure 1 Figure 1. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.

Author(s):  
Harpreet Kaur ◽  
William S. Bush ◽  
Scott L. Letendre ◽  
Ronald J. Ellis ◽  
Robert K. Heaton ◽  
...  

1996 ◽  
Vol 16 (5) ◽  
pp. 1909-1920 ◽  
Author(s):  
G X Tong ◽  
M Jeyakumar ◽  
M R Tanen ◽  
M K Bagchi

Unliganded thyroid hormone receptor (TR) functions as a transcriptional repressor of genes bearing thyroid hormone response elements in their promoters. Binding of hormonal ligand to the receptor releases the transcriptional silencing and leads to gene activation. Previous studies showed that the silencing activity of TR is located within the C-terminal ligand-binding domain (LBD) of the receptor. To dissect the role of the LBD in receptor-mediated silencing, we used a cell-free transcription system containing HeLa nuclear extracts in which exogenously added unliganded TRbeta repressed the basal level of RNA polymerase II-driven transcription from a thyroid hormone response element-linked template. We designed competition experiments with a peptide fragment containing the entire LBD (positions 145 to 456) of TRbeta. This peptide, which lacks the DNA-binding domain, did not affect basal RNA synthesis from the thyroid hormone response element-linked promoter when added to a cell-free transcription reaction mixture. However, the addition of the LBD peptide to a reaction mixture containing TRbeta led to a complete reversal of receptor-mediated transcriptional silencing in the absence of thyroid hormone. An LBD peptide harboring point mutations, which severely impair receptor dimerization, also inhibited efficiently the silencing activity of TR, indicating that the relief of repression by the LBD was not due to the sequestration of TR or its heterodimeric partner retinoid X receptor into inactive homo- or heterodimers. We postulate that the LBD peptide competed with TR for a regulatory molecule, termed a corepressor, that exists in the HeLa nuclear extracts and is essential for efficient receptor-mediated gene repression. We have identified the region from positions 145 to 260 (the D domain) of the LBD as a potential binding site of the putative corepressor. We observed further that a peptide containing the LBD of retinoic acid receptor (RAR) competed for TR-mediated silencing, suggesting that the RAR LBD may bind to the same corepressor activity as the TR LBD. Interestingly, the RAR LBD complexed with its cognate ligand, all-trans retinoic acid, failed to compete for transcriptional silencing by TRbeta, indicating that the association of the LBD with the corepressor is ligand dependent. Finally, we provide strong biochemical evidence supporting the existence of the corepressor activity in the HeLa nuclear extracts. Our studies demonstrated that the silencing activity of TR was greatly reduced in the nuclear extracts preincubated with immobilized, hormone-free glutathione S-transferase-LBD fusion proteins, indicating that the corepressor activity was depleted from these extracts through protein-protein interactions with the LBD. Similar treatment with immobilized, hormone-bound glutathione S-transferase-LBD, on the other hand, failed to deplete the corepressor activity from the nuclear extracts, indicating that ligand binding to the LBD disrupts its interaction with the corepressor. From these results, we propose that a corepressor binds to the LBD of unliganded TR and critically influences the interaction of the receptor with the basal transcription machinery to promote silencing. Ligand binding to TR results in the release of the corepressor from the LBD and triggers the reversal of silencing by allowing the events leading to gene activation to proceed.


PLoS Genetics ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 15 (9) ◽  
pp. e1008396 ◽  
Author(s):  
Simone Mumbauer ◽  
Justine Pascual ◽  
Irina Kolotuev ◽  
Fisun Hamaratoglu

2020 ◽  
Vol 45 ◽  
pp. 102335 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniel Wynn ◽  
Thomas W. Lategan ◽  
Tiffany N. Sprague ◽  
Franck S. Rousseau ◽  
Edward J. Fox

IUBMB Life ◽  
1997 ◽  
Vol 43 (5) ◽  
pp. 981-988 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jong-Seok Lim ◽  
Seung-Hwan Lee ◽  
Eunsik Lee ◽  
Young Kang ◽  
Jae Wha Kim ◽  
...  

2004 ◽  
Vol 56 (1) ◽  
pp. 21-33 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hong Ja Kim ◽  
Chi Young Yun ◽  
Hyang Mi Cheon ◽  
Boa Chae ◽  
In Hee Lee ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 21 (Supplement_6) ◽  
pp. vi257-vi257
Author(s):  
Bhavyata Pandya ◽  
Vagisha Ravi ◽  
James Connor

Abstract Increased expression of Ferritin heavy chain (FHC) protein has been associated with poor prognosis in Glioblastoma Multiforme (GBM) which is one of the most aggressive and common types of brain cancer. GBM patients have also been found to have increased extracellular ferritin levels, in their serum and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), which are lowered once the source/tumor has been resected. Extracellular FHC can function as an iron delivery protein, and increasing amount of iron has been known to contribute to tumor initiation and proliferation. To study the effect of extracellular FHC in GBM cells we used patient derived GBM, CD133+ cancer stem cells (GSCs) from the pro-neural (T3691) and mesenchymal (T387) subtypes. Using recombinant FHC, conjugated with quantum dots (QD), we observed significant increase in cellular viability and intracellular uptake of FHC by the GSCs in a dose dependent manner. Our lab has previously shown that extracellular FHC interacts with T-Cell Immunoglobulin Mucin Receptor 1 (Tim-1) in the human oligodendrocytes. In order to determine if GSCs express the Tim-1 receptor we first confirmed its expression on GSCs using immunoblotting and immunocytochemistry. To test if FHC interacts with Tim-1, we performed knockdown of Tim-1 using siRNAs. However, the siRNA was not able to downregulate the Tim-1 receptors. Next, we exposed the GSCs to Sema4A, which has been shown in our previous studies to interact with Tim-1 receptor on human oligodendrocytes and is toxic to oligodendrocytes. The GSCs however were not affected by the saturable concentration of Sema4A. Thus, through this study we have shown the expression of potential FHC receptors on GSCs and a robust effect of H-ferritin on GSCs proliferation. Further experiments are warranted in this direction to understand this extracellular FHC uptake pathway and its role in GBM cell proliferation.


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