| Literature DB >> 22844641 |
Ross N England1, Michael V Autieri.
Abstract
Despite aggressive dietary modification, lipid-lowering medications, and other interventional medical therapy, vascular disease continues to be a leading cause of mortality in the western world. It is a significant medical and socioeconomic problem contributing to mortality of multiple diseases including myocardial infarction, stroke, renal failure, and peripheral vascular disease. Morbidity and mortality of vascular disease are expected to worsen with the increasing number of patients with comorbid conditions such as obesity, metabolic syndrome, and diabetes mellitus type 2. Vascular diseases such as atherosclerosis, restenosis, and allograft vasculopathy are recognized to be driven by inflammation, and as such, cytokines which mediate inflammation not only represent important targets of rational therapy, but also can be considered as possible therapeutic modalities themselves. In this paper, we will examine the role of inflammatory cytokines and lymphocyte T(h)1/T(h)2 polarity in vascular inflammation, with a focus on atherosclerotic vascular disease. We will then introduce a recently described T(h)2 interleukin, interleukin-19 (IL-19), as a previously unrecognized mediator of vascular inflammatory disorders. We will review our current understanding of this interleukin in health and disease and present the possibility that IL-19 could represent a potential therapeutic to combat vascular inflammatory disease.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22844641 PMCID: PMC3403192 DOI: 10.1155/2012/253583
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Inflam ISSN: 2042-0099
Effects of IL-19 in nonvascular cell types.
| Tissue type | Effect | Species | Source |
|---|---|---|---|
| Immune cells | Th2 response in T cells | h, m | [ |
| Inhibits IFN- | h | [ | |
| Induces IL-4 and IL-13 production in T cells | h | [ | |
| Induces IL-10 production in monocytes | h |
[ | |
| Autoinduces IL-19 expression in PBMC; dendritic cells | h |
[ | |
| Induce KGF expression in CD8+ T cells | h | [ | |
| Suppress cell-mediated immunity in postbypass patients | h | [ | |
| Induced production of IL-6; TNF- | m |
[ | |
| Induced ROS production and apoptosis in monocytes | m |
[ | |
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| Skin cells | Expressed in keratinocytes in psoriatic skin | h | [ |
| STAT3 phosphorylation in HaCat keratinocyte cell line | h | [ | |
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| Airway epithelium | HBEC-produced IL-19 induces TNF- | h | [ |
| Induced apoptosis in lung epithelium cells | h | [ | |
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| Colon epithelium | IL-19 expression is protective against dextran sucrose sodium-induced colitis | m | [ |
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| Cancer cells | Inhibit proliferation in NIH:OVCAR3 (ovarian carcinoma) cells | h | [ |
| Increase proliferation in oral squamous cell carcinoma cells | h | [ | |
| Increase proliferation in breast cancer cells | h, m | [ | |
| Induced IL-1 | m | [ | |
| Induced fibronectin expression in 4T1 breast cancer cells | m | [ | |
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| Fetal membranes | Induce IL-6 production | h | [ |
| Inhibit LPS-induced TNF- | h | [ | |
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| Liver | Induced ROS production in Huh-7 cell line | h | [ |
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| Synovial fluid | Inhibits apoptosis in RASC | h | [ |
| Activates STAT3 and induces IL-6 production in RASC | h | [ | |
| Induces TNF- | r | [ | |
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| Nasal fibroblast | Inhibits IL-4-induced eotaxin expression by SOCS1-dependent mechanism | h |
[ |
Abbreviations: HBEC: human bronchial epithelial cell, RASC: rat arthritis synovial cell, h: human, m: mouse, r: rat.
Effects of IL-19 on resident vascular cells.
| Tissue type | Effect | Species | Source |
|---|---|---|---|
| EC | Autoinduces IL-19 expression | h | [ |
| Activates STAT3, Rac1, and MAPK p44/42 | h | [ | |
| Increases EC proliferation | h | [ | |
| Increases EC spreading, and migration | h | [ | |
| Proangiogenic (increase tube, microvessel formation) | m | [ | |
| Inhibits HuR nucleocytoplasmic translocation | h | [ | |
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| VSMC | Inhibits proliferation, hyperplasia | h, r | [ |
| Autoinduces IL-19 expression | h | [ | |
| STAT3 phosphorylation, translocation | h | [ | |
| Increases SOCS5 expression | h | [ | |
| Inhibits MAPKs (p44/42, p38) | h | [ | |
| Decreases inflammatory, proliferative proteins, and mRNAs | h | [ | |
| Decreases HuR protein abundance | h | [ | |
| Inhibits HuR nucleocytoplasmic translocation | h | [ | |
| Decreases ARE-bearing mRNA stability | h | [ | |
| Inhibits PKC | h | [ | |
| Inhibits migration, spreading | h | [ | |
| Inhibits activation of MLC, cofilin, Hsp70, Rac1, and RhoA | h | [ | |
| STAT3-dependent increase heme oxygenase-1 expression | h | [ | |
| Decreases ROS | h, m | [ | |
| Inhibits apoptosis | h | [ | |
Abbreviations: h: human, m: mouse, r: rat.
Figure 1Proposed pleiotropic mechanisms of IL-19 effects in vascular smooth muscle cells. Several mechanisms occurring independently or concurrently may be responsible for IL-19 anti-inflammatory effects on VSMC. These include STAT3-mediated SOCS5 expression, which dampens early activation events such as signal transduction. The second is a down-regulation of HuR abundance and cytoplasmic translocation, resulting in attenuation of proliferative and inflammatory gene expression. The third is expression of HO-1, with subsequent protective effects attributed to HO-1 such as reduction of intracellular ROS. These mechanisms are not mutually exclusive, so varying degrees or combinations of each are likely.