| Literature DB >> 26337825 |
Huaqing Liu1,2, Jennifer Dolkas3,4, Khan Hoang5,6, Mila Angert7,8, Andrei V Chernov9, Albert G Remacle10, Sergey A Shiryaev11, Alex Y Strongin12, Tasuku Nishihara13,14, Veronica I Shubayev15,16.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Mechanical pain hypersensitivity associated with physical trauma to peripheral nerve depends on T-helper (Th) cells expressing the algesic cytokine, interleukin (IL)-17A. Fibronectin (FN) isoform alternatively spliced within the IIICS region encoding the 25-residue-long connecting segment 1 (CS1) regulates T cell recruitment to the sites of inflammation. Herein, we analyzed the role of CS1-containing FN (FN-CS1) in IL-17A expression and pain after peripheral nerve damage.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26337825 PMCID: PMC4559385 DOI: 10.1186/s12974-015-0377-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neuroinflammation ISSN: 1742-2094 Impact factor: 8.322
Fig. 1FN in CCI nerve. a Fibronectin (FN) exists as a heterodimer linked by disulfide bonds. One of the monomers includes the 25-amino-acid-long CS1 sequence. Typical CS1 inclusion and exclusion splice variants are illustrated. b FN immunoblot of rat sciatic nerve, normal or at days 1 and 7 after CCI. β-actin, a loading control (40 μg total protein). c The graph represents the mean levels of the individual FN isoform recorded in (b). ±SEM relative to β-actin (n = 3–4/group; *p < 0.05, **p < 0.01, n.s. not significant). d FN-CS1 immunostaining (red) in sciatic nerves at day 7 post-CCI. The vessel (V) endothelial cells, Schwann cells, and macrophages (confirmed using the CD68 immunostaining, green) are stained. DAPI, blue. Representative of n = 3/group; scale bars, 40 μm. e FN-CS1 immunostaining (red) in a teased nerve fiber at day 7 post-CCI; representative of ~20 individual fibers from n = 3. Scale bar, 10 μm. NoR node of Ranvier
FN peptide sequences in the rat sciatic nerve
| Peptide sequence | Peptide sequence | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 69TYLGNALVCTCYGGSR84 | 27 | 1446TGLDSPTGFDSSDVTANSFTVHWVAPR1472 |
| 2 | 85GFNCESKPEPEETCFDK101 | 28 | 1473APITGYIIR1481 |
| 3 | 85GFNCESKPEPEETCFDKYTGNTYK108 | 29 | 1525EESPPLIGQQSTVSDVPR1542 |
| 4 | 118DSMIWDCTCIGAGR131 | 30 | 1570ITYGETGGNSPVQEFTVPGSK1590 |
| 5 | 118DSMIWDCTCIGAGRGRISCTIANR141 | 31 | 1591STATINNIKPGADYTITLYAVTGR1614 |
| 6 | 254GNLLQCVCTGNGR266 | 32 | 1615GDSPASSKPVSINYQTEIDKPSQMQVTDVQDNSISVR1651 |
| 7 | 274HVLQSASAGSGSFTDVR290 | 33 | 1652WLPSTSPVTGYR1663 |
| 8 | 291TAIYQPQTHPQPAPYGHCVTDSGVVYSVGMQWLK324 | 34 | 1708NGESQPLVQTAVTNIDRPK1726 |
| 9 | 370TFYSCTTEGR379 | 35 | 1727GLAFTDVDVDSIK1739 |
| 10 | 380QDGHLWCSTTSNYEQDQK397 | 36 | 1820FTQVSPTTLTAQWTAPSVK1838 |
| 11 | 398YSFCTDHAVLVQTR411 | 37 | 1857EINLSPDSTSVIVSGLM[147]VATK1877 |
| 12 | 458FGFCPMAAHEEICTTNEGVMYR479 | 38 | 1878YEVSVYALK1886 |
| 13 | 504GQWACIPYSQLR515 | 39 | 1887DTLTSRPAQGVVTTLENVSPPR1908 |
| 14 | 670GLTPGVIYEGQLISIQQYGHQEVTR694 | 40 | 1887DTLTSRPAQGVVTTLENVSPPRR1909 |
| 15 | 785YIVNVYQISEEGK797 | 41 | 1926TKTETITGFQVDAIPANGQTPVQR1949 |
| 16 | 798QSLILSTSQTTAPDAPPDPTVDQVDDTSIVVR829 | 42 | 1928TETITGFQVDAIPANGQTPVQR1949 |
| 17 | 821TQVSPTTLTAQWTAPSVK838 | 43 | 1957SYTITGLQPGTDYK1970 |
| 18 | 830WSRPQAPITGYR841 | 44 | 1982SSPVVIDASTAIDAPSNLR2000 |
| 19 | 881AVEENQESTPVFIQQETTGVPR902 | 45 | 2001FLTTTPNSLLVSWQAPR2017 |
| 20 | 911DLQFVEVTDVK921 | 46 | 2008SLLVSWQAPR2017 |
| 21 | 938VDVLPVNLPGEHGQR952 | 47 | 2081TDELPQLVTLPHPNLHGPEILDVPSTVQK2109 |
| 22 | 1011TVLVTWTPPR1020 | 48 | 2161LRPRPYLPNVDEEVQIGHVPR2181 |
| 23 | 1054NLQPGSEYTVTLMAVK1069 | 49 | 2165PYLPNVDEEVQIGHVPR2181 |
| 24 | 1116LGVRPSQGGEAPR1128 | 50 | 2255GVTYNIIVEALHNQR2269 |
| 25 | 1254ESAPISDTVIPEVPQLTDLSFVDITDSSIGLR1285 | 51 | 2321LTCQCLGFGSGHFR2334 |
| 26 | 1365FTNIGPDTMR1374 | 52 | 2401EYLGAICSCTCFGGQR2416 |
| 27 | 1446TGLDSPTGFDSSDVTANSFTVHWVAPR1472 | 53 | 2452TNTNVNCPIECFMPLDVQADRDDSRE2477 |
2D-LC-MS/MS of sciatic nerve samples was performed at day 7 after sham surgery or CCI. The sequence of the 53 identified FN peptides (with the total coverage over 35 %) is shown. The presence of the TDELPQLVTLPHPNLHGPEI PSTVQK 2081–2109 peptide (#47) that included the CS1 sequence (italicized) implied that the 2477 residue long rat FN-CS1 splice variant (GeneBank #P04937.2) was present in our nerve samples
Fig. 2Acute CS1 therapy attenuates mechanical allodynia. The CS1 and scrambled (sCS1) peptides each dissolved in PBS (50 μg/ml in 5 μl) or PBS alone (5 μl) were administered by a single intraneural injection immediately after CCI (arrow). a von Frey testing for mechanical allodynia. Decline in the withdrawal threshold in the ipsilateral (ipsi) to CCI hind paw treated with PBS represents allodynia sustained for the study duration. sCS1 produced no significant change in the thresholds compared to PBS. In contrast, CS1-treated rats developed reduced sensitivity to tactile stimuli, compared to sCS1 (#) and PBS (*). Contralateral to injury, hind paws displayed no sensitivity to stimulus in either treatment group. The mean withdrawal thresholds (gram force; g) ± SEM of n = 6–17/group (* and #, p < 0.05, by ANOVA and Tukey’s post hoc test). b Hargreaves testing for thermal sensitivity. Withdrawal latency to thermal stimulation (radiant heat) decreased after CCI compared with prior to CCI (baseline). At the indicated days after CS1 and PBS injections, the sensitivity to thermal stimulation was not different between the groups. The mean paw withdrawal latency (seconds; s) ± SEM of n = 6/group
Fig. 3Acute CS1 therapy reduces IL-17A levels in CCI nerve. a Taqman qRT-PCR of IL-17A in sciatic nerve after acute intraneural CS1 or sCS1 treatment (50 μg/ml in 5 μl) performed at day 7 post-CCI after the completion of behavioral testing (Fig. 2). The mean relative mRNA ± SEM of n = 5/group normalized to GAPDH compared to naive nerve (*p < 0.05). b Methylene blue/azure II staining in 1-μm-thick sciatic nerve sections after acute intraneural CS1 or sCS1 treatment (50 μg/ml in 5 μl) performed at day 7 post-CCI, after the completion of behavioral testing (Fig. 2). Control nerve showed intact nerve morphology. CCI nerves displayed Wallerian degeneration (axonal degeneration, edema, myelin ovoids, and immune cell infiltration) after sCS1 treatment. In contrast, a greater number of uncompromised axons were observed in CCI nerves treated with CS1. Representative micrographs of n = 3/group. Scale bars, 20 μm
Fig. 4CS1 peptide inhibits Schwann cell activation. ERK1/2 immunoblotting in cultured Schwann cell lysates (11 μg total protein each) treated with CS1. Schwann cells were either starved in DMEM-1 % FBS for 24 h (a) or pre-treated with LPS (100 ng/ml) for 15 min (b) followed by CS1 (2.5 μg/ml) for 15 min or 1 h. The mean optical density of pERK1/2 to total ERK1/2 ratio based on four independent experiments (the graph, *p < 0.05)