| Literature DB >> 26956485 |
Stephanie Saul1, Christine S Gibhardt1, Barbara Schmidt2, Annette Lis1, Bastian Pasieka1, David Conrad1, Philipp Jung3, Rosmarie Gaupp3, Bodo Wonnenberg4, Ebru Diler4, Hedwig Stanisz5, Thomas Vogt5, Eva C Schwarz1, Markus Bischoff3, Mathias Herrmann3, Thomas Tschernig4, Reinhard Kappl1, Heiko Rieger6, Barbara A Niemeyer7, Ivan Bogeski8.
Abstract
In phagocytes, pathogen recognition is followed by Ca(2+) mobilization and NADPH oxidase 2 (NOX2)-mediated "oxidative burst," which involves the rapid production of large amounts of reactive oxygen species (ROS). We showed that ORAI Ca(2+) channels control store-operated Ca(2+) entry, ROS production, and bacterial killing in primary human monocytes. ROS inactivate ORAI channels that lack an ORAI3 subunit. Staphylococcal infection of mice reduced the expression of the gene encoding the redox-sensitive Orai1 and increased the expression of the gene encoding the redox-insensitive Orai3 in the lungs or in bronchoalveolar lavages. A similar switch from ORAI1 to ORAI3 occurred in primary human monocytes exposed to bacterial peptides in culture. These alterations in ORAI1 and ORAI3 abundance shifted the channel assembly toward a more redox-insensitive configuration. Accordingly, silencing ORAI3 increased the redox sensitivity of the channel and enhanced oxidation-induced inhibition of NOX2. We generated a mathematical model that predicted additional features of the Ca(2+)-redox interplay. Our results identified the ORAI-NOX2 feedback loop as a determinant of monocyte immune responses.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26956485 DOI: 10.1126/scisignal.aaf1639
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Signal ISSN: 1945-0877 Impact factor: 8.192