| Literature DB >> 17803913 |
Florian R Greten1, Melek C Arkan, Julia Bollrath, Li-Chung Hsu, Jason Goode, Cornelius Miething, Serkan I Göktuna, Michael Neuenhahn, Joshua Fierer, Stephan Paxian, Nico Van Rooijen, Yajun Xu, Timothy O'Cain, Bruce B Jaffee, Dirk H Busch, Justus Duyster, Roland M Schmid, Lars Eckmann, Michael Karin.
Abstract
IKKbeta-dependent NF-kappaB activation plays a key role in innate immunity and inflammation, and inhibition of IKKbeta has been considered as a likely anti-inflammatory therapy. Surprisingly, however, mice with a targeted IKKbeta deletion in myeloid cells are more susceptible to endotoxin-induced shock than control mice. Increased endotoxin susceptibility is associated with elevated plasma IL-1beta as a result of increased pro-IL-1beta processing, which was also seen upon bacterial infection. In macrophages enhanced pro-IL-1beta processing depends on caspase-1, whose activation is inhibited by NF-kappaB-dependent gene products. In neutrophils, however, IL-1beta secretion is caspase-1 independent and depends on serine proteases, whose activity is also inhibited by NF-kappaB gene products. Prolonged pharmacologic inhibition of IKKbeta also augments IL-1beta secretion upon endotoxin challenge. These results unravel an unanticipated role for IKKbeta-dependent NF-kappaB signaling in the negative control of IL-1beta production and highlight potential complications of long-term IKKbeta inhibition.Entities:
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Year: 2007 PMID: 17803913 PMCID: PMC2134986 DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2007.07.009
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell ISSN: 0092-8674 Impact factor: 41.582