Vertebrate Toll-like receptor 5 (TLR5) recognizes bacterial flagellin proteins and activates innate immune responses to motile bacteria. In addition, activation of TLR5 signaling can inhibit growth of TLR5-expressing tumors and protect normal tissues from radiation and ischemia-reperfusion injuries. To understand the mechanisms behind these phenomena at the organismal level, we assessed nuclear factor kappa B (NF-κB) activation (indicative of TLR5 signaling) in tissues and cells of mice treated with CBLB502, a pharmacologically optimized flagellin derivative. This identified the liver and gastrointestinal tract as primary CBLB502 target organs. In particular, liver hepatocytes were the main cell type directly and specifically responding to systemic administration of CBLB502 but not to that of the TLR4 agonist LPS. To assess CBLB502 impact on other pathways, we created multireporter mice with hepatocytes transduced in vivo with reporters for 46 inducible transcription factor families and found that along with NF-κB, CBLB502 strongly activated STAT3-, phenobarbital-responsive enhancer module (PREM), and activator protein 1 (AP-1-) -driven pathways. Livers of CBLB502-treated mice displayed induction of numerous immunomodulatory factors and massive recruitment of various types of immune cells. This led to inhibition of growth of liver metastases of multiple tumors regardless of their TLR5 status. The changed liver microenvironment was not, however, hepatotoxic, because CBLB502 induced resistance to Fas-mediated apoptosis in normal liver cells. Temporary occlusion of liver blood circulation prevented CBLB502 from protecting hematopoietic progenitors in lethally irradiated mice, indicating involvement of a factor secreted by responding liver cells. These results define the liver as the key mediator of TLR5-dependent effects in vivo and suggest clinical applications for TLR5 agonists as hepatoprotective and antimetastatic agents.breast cancer | colon cancer | neutrophils | natural killer cells | Salmonella T oll-like receptors (TLRs) recognize and are activated by specific patterns in molecules that are produced by a broad range of microbial pathogens but are not present in host molecules. Activation of TLRs by these pathogen-associated molecular patterns leads to induction of infection-fighting innate immune responses (1). Various TLR agonists have been considered for multiple clinical applications, including cancer immunotherapy (2-4), and one, the TLR7 agonist imiquimod, is approved for topical treatment of basal cell carcinoma (5).Although signaling pathways induced by different TLRs all result in mobilization of an innate immune response and involve activation of nuclear factor kappa B (NF-κB), the key regulator of immunity (6, 7), TLR5 is a particularly attractive candidate for therapeutic targeting for several reasons. First, bacterial flagellin, the natural ligand of TLR5, was found to have strong radioprotective effects in rodents and nonhuman primates (8). CBLB502 is a rationally designed derivative of Salmon...
Prokaryotes of the genus Mycoplasma are the smallest cellular organisms that persist as obligate extracellular parasites. Although mycoplasma infection is known to be associated with chromosomal instability and can promote malignant transformation, the mechanisms underlying these phenomena remain unknown. Since persistence of many cellular parasites requires suppression of apoptosis in host cells, we tested the effect of mycoplasma infection on the activity of the p53 and nuclear factor (NF)-jB pathways, major mechanisms controlling programmed cell death. To monitor the activity of p53 and NF-jB in mycoplasma-infected cells, we used a panel of reporter cell lines expressing the bacterial b-galactosidase gene under the control of p53-or NF-jB-responsive promoters. Cells incubated with media conditioned with different species of mycoplasma showed constitutive activation of NF-jB and reduced activation of p53, common characteristics of the majority of human tumor cells, with M. arginini having the strongest effect among the species tested. Moreover, mycoplasma infection reduced the expression level and inducibility of an endogenous p53-responsive gene, p21 waf1 , and inhibited apoptosis induced by genotoxic stress. Infection with M. arginini made rat and mouse embryo fibroblasts susceptible to transformation with oncogenic H-Ras, whereas mycoplasma-free cells underwent irreversible p53-dependent growth arrest. Mycoplasma infection was as effective as shRNA-mediated knockdown of p53 expression in making rodent fibroblasts permissive to Rasinduced transformation. These observations indicate that mycoplasma infection plays the role of a p53-suppressing oncogene that cooperates with Ras in cell transformation and suggest that the carcinogenic and mutagenic effects of mycoplasma might be due to inhibition of p53 tumor suppressor function by this common human parasite.
The mechanisms underlying the complex and multistage wound-healing process are not yet completely understood. One of the most important and intriguing questions remaining is the effect of the interactions between wounds and the microflora that are present in wounds. In this report, we describe the first study of the effect of treating murine skin wounds with topical bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS), the main exogenous ligand of Toll-like receptor 4. Our findings demonstrate that LPS treatment strongly affects the wound-healing process by accelerating the resolution of inflammation, increasing macrophage infiltration, enhancing collagen synthesis, and altering the secretion of a number of mediators that are involved in the skin regeneration process. Topical LPS treatment upregulated the secretion of proinflammatory cytokines [interleukin (IL)-6, IL-1β, and leukemia inhibitory factor (LIF)] and CC-chemokines (CCL2/MCP-1, CCL7/MCP-3, CCL3/MIP-1α, and CCL5/RANTES), but not CXC-chemokines (CXCL2/MIP-2 and CXCL9/MIG). The secretion of growth factors (vascular endothelial growth factor, transforming growth factor-β1 (TGF-β1), and fibroblast growth factor 2) at the wound site was also upregulated. Taken together, these results suggest that the topical application of LPS at the wound surface affects the inflammatory process and promotes the wound healing of injured skin.
Non-thermal plasma (NTP) consists of a huge amount of biologically active particles, whereas its temperature is close to ambient. This combination allows one to use NTP as a perspective tool for solving different biomedical tasks, including antitumor therapy. The treatment of tumor cells with NTP caused dose-dependent effects, such as growth arrest and apoptosis. However, while the outcome of NTP treatment has been established, the molecular mechanisms of the interaction between NTP and eukaryotic cells have not been thoroughly studied thus far. In this work, the mechanisms and the type of death of human colon carcinoma HCT 116 cells upon application of non-thermal argon plasma were studied. The effect of NTP on the major stress-activated protein p53 was investigated. The results demonstrate that the viability of HCT116 cells upon plasma treatment is dependent on the functional p53 protein. NTP treatment caused an increase in the intracellular concentration of p53 and the induction of the p53-controlled regulon. The p53-dependent accumulation of active proapoptotic caspase-3 was shown in NTP-treated cells. The study was the first to demonstrate that treatment of human colon carcinoma cells with NTP results in p53-dependent apoptosis. The results obtained contribute to our understanding of the applicability of NTP in antitumor therapy.
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