| Literature DB >> 30546359 |
Antje Beling1,2, Meike Kespohl1,2.
Abstract
Viral myocarditis is an inflammation of the heart muscle triggered by direct virus-induced cytolysis and immune response mechanisms with most severe consequences during early childhood. Acute and long-term manifestation of damaged heart tissue and disturbances of cardiac performance involve virus-triggered adverse activation of the immune response and both immunopathology, as well as, autoimmunity account for such immune-destructive processes. It is a matter of ongoing debate to what extent subclinical virus infection contributes to the debilitating sequela of the acute disease. In this review, we conceptualize the many functions of the proteasome in viral myocarditis and discuss the adaptation of this multi-catalytic protease complex together with its implications on the course of disease. Inhibition of proteasome function is already highly relevant as a strategy in treating various malignancies. However, cardiotoxicity and immune-related adverse effects have proven significant hurdles, representative of the target's wide-ranging functions. Thus, we further discuss the molecular details of proteasome-mediated activity of the immune response for virus-mediated inflammatory heart disease. We summarize how the spatiotemporal flexibility of the proteasome might be tackled for therapeutic purposes aiming to mitigate virus-mediated adverse activation of the immune response in the heart.Entities:
Keywords: cytokine; heart failure; immunopathology; myocarditis; proteasome; virus
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30546359 PMCID: PMC6279938 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2018.02620
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Effect of the proteasome on the propagation of viral particles.
| Adenovirus | HeLa cells | MG132 | Reduced | Late gene expression | ( |
| Mouse adenovirus | C57BL/6 mice | LMP7−/− | No effect | n.r. | ( |
| Coxsackie-virus B3 (CVB3) | Murine myxoma cell line HL-1 | MG132, lactacystin | Reduced | Post entry | ( |
| A/J mice | MLN353 | No effect | n.r. | ( | |
| C57BL/6 mice | LMP7−/− | No effect | n.r. | ( | |
| Murine embryonic cardiomyocytes | ONX 0914 | No effect | n.r. | ( | |
| C57BL/6 mice | ONX 0914 | Increased cardiac titers | |||
| A/J mice | ONX 0914 | No effect on cardiac titers | |||
| HeLa cells | PA28α/β siRNA | Increased | n.r. | ( | |
| HeLa cells | PA28α/β overexpression | Reduced | |||
| Murine embryonic cardiomyocytes | PA28α/β−/− | Increased | |||
| C57BL/6 mice | PA28α/β−/− | No effect on cardiac titers | |||
| Herpes simplex virus 1 (HSV-1) | Monkey kidney epithelial cells (Vero cells) | MG132 epoxomicin lactacystin | Reduced | Virus entry/post penetration step | ( |
| HeLa derivative HEp-2 | MG132, MG115, epoxomicin | Reduced | Immediate-early and late viral proteins | ( | |
| Human cytomegalo-virus (HCMV) | Human embryonic lung fibroblasts | MG132 | Reduced | All stages of viral replication | ( |
| Human embryonic lung fibroblasts | MG132 | Reduced | Immediate early protein synthesis | ( | |
| Human immuno-deficiency virus 1/2 (HIV1/2) | HeLa cells, human T cell line A3.01 | MG132, lactacystin | Reduced | Gag processing and virus particle release | ( |
| Human CD4+ T cells, human CD4+ cell line OM-10.1 | Bortezomib, lactacystin, MG132 | Reduced | Infectivity of the virion and viral latency | ( | |
| Influenza A virus | Canine kidney cells MDCK | MG132, bortezomib | Reduced | Post fusion | ( |
| Minute virus of mice | Murine B cells A9 | MG132, lactacystin, epoxomicin | Reduced | Post endosomal escape | ( |
| Polio virus | HeLa cells | MG132, bortezomib | Reduced | Post entry (no effect on translation) | ( |
| Vaccinia virus | HeLa cells | MG132, epoxomicin | Reduced | Post entry (viral genome replication; intermediate and late gene expression) | ( |
| HeLa cells | MG132, bortezomib | Reduced | Genome uncoating, replication, late viral gene expression, virus assembly | ( |
The table summarizes viruses with known cardiac tropism and the impact of different proteasome inhibitors (bortezomib, MG132, lactacystin, MLN353, MG115, as well as, the immunoproteasome-selective inhibitor ONX 0914 (.
Murine pathogens.
Figure 1Impact of i-proteasome subunits on innate immune signaling in myeloid cells. Among many different pattern recognition receptors, TLRs are sensors of microbial antigens on monocytes/macrophages and dendritic cells. These membrane-bound receptors are located both on the cellular surface (TLR4—colored in red) and in endosomes (TLR3—green, TLR7—blue, TLR9—purple) (101). Signaling pathways down-stream of TLR4, TLR7, and TLR9 involve the common adaptor molecule MyD88 (130, 131). Upon TLR stimulation, the ubiquitin E3 ligase TRAF6 engages with the TLR/MyD88 complex and generates poly-ubiquitin scaffolds (132), thereby recruiting the TAK1 complex (133). TAK1 then activates the IKK complex, which in turn phosphorylates IκBα. Ubiquitination of IκBα marks it for degradation by the proteasome. Thereafter, NF-κB translocates into the nucleus. Simultaneously, TAK1 induces MAP kinase signaling (134), which results in the phosphorylation of ERK1/2, p38, and JNK and thereby activates the transcription factor AP-1. Both NF-κB and AP-1 induce the expression of co-stimulatory molecules (CD80, CD86, CD40) and migration signals (CCR7) on DCs, the secretion of pro-inflammatory cytokines (e.g., TNF-α, IL-6, IL-23, IL-1β), chemokines (e.g., Mip2α, MCP-1, IP-10, RANTES), and of Pentraxin3 by monocytes/macrophages (cytokines partially also by DCs). MyD88-dependent TLR7/9 signaling induces the phosphorylation of IRF7, which is a key regulator of T1IFN (IFNα, IFNβ) expression in pDCs (135). Signals from TLR3 and TLR4 are transmitted by a MyD88-independent, TRIF-dependent pathway involving activating kinases (131). Phosphorylation of IRF-3 induces translocation into the nucleus. Results obtained from in vitro studies, in which the impact of the different peptidase activities of the proteasome isoforms regarding to TLR signaling or the expression of effector molecules were investigated by different approaches, are summarized. Colors indicate the type of TLR stimulated to activate innate immune cells of different origin including human PBMCs, murine splenocytes, bone marrow cells and peritoneal macrophages. Each box illustrates both the model used to alter a specific peptidase activity of the proteasome—innate myeloid cells isolated from knock out mice or proteasome inhibitors with different specificity studied in innate myeloid cells, as well as, the observed effect either on the respective signaling pathway or on the production of respective effector molecules. (↓): reduced phosphorylation of a key molecule in the indicated signaling pathway or lower production of the effector molecule, = no alteration of signaling or production of the effector molecule. AP-1, activator protein 1; BTZ, bortezomib—a pan-specific proteasome inhibitor included because the i-proteasome is highly abundant in DCs (136), CCR7, C-C chemokine receptor type 7; DC, dendritic cell; ERK, extracellular signal–regulated kinases; IκBs, inhibitors of κB; IKK, IκB kinase; IP-10, interferon-gamma induced protein 10; IRF3, interferon regulatory factor 3; JNK, c-Jun N-terminal kinase; MAPK, mitogen-activated protein kinase; MCP-1, monocyte chemoattractant protein 1; Mip2α, macrophage inflammatory protein 2α; MKK, mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase; MyD88, myeloid differentiation primary response 88; NF-κB, nuclear factor-κB; ONX 0914, immunoproteasome inhibitor (59); RANTES, regulated on activation; normal T cell expressed and secreted; T1IFN, type I interferon; TAK1, transforming growth factor-β activated kinase 1; TLR, Toll-like receptor; TNF-α, tumor necrosis factor α; TRAF, TNF receptor associated factor; TRIF, TIR-domain-containing adapter inducing IFNβ. (1) (59) (2) (63) (3) (104) (4) (105) (5) (114) (6) (72) (7) (137) (8) (138) (9) (116).
Figure 2Regulation of NF-κB signaling by the proteasome. Multiple inflammatory signals result in the activation of the transcription factor NF-κB through a variety of adapter proteins and kinases. The most abundant form of the NF-κB dimer is the p50/p65 heterodimer. (A) The p105 precursor is processed by the proteasome, thereby liberating the NF-kB p50 subunit for dimerization with p65. IκB retains the NF-κB heterodimer in the cytoplasm. (B) Ligand binding to cellular receptors like TLRs activates the IKK complex, which catalyzes the phosphorylation of IκB, inducing its poly-ubiquitination and degradation by the proteasome. (C) Activated NF-κB translocates into the nucleus, where it (D) activates target gene expression. Table 2 summarizes all reported effects of i-proteasome activity on the different steps in this canonical NF-κB signaling pathway. NF-kB, nuclear factor kappa B; IκBs, inhibitors of κB; IKK, IκB kinase.
Regulation of NF-κB signaling by the i-proteasome.
| Processing of the NF-κB p105 precursor protein—(A) | LMP2 | NOD and LMP2−/− mice | Splenocytes | WB, IVP | ( |
| LMP2, MECL-1 | IBD patients | Isolated proteasomes from colonic mucosa | IVP | ( | |
| LMP2, LMP7 | Cells lacking LMP2 and LMP7 | T2 cells (human) | WB, IVP | ( | |
| LMP2, LMP7 | Cells lacking LMP2 and LMP7 | T2 cells | WB | ( | |
| IκBα degradation by the proteasome—(B) | LMP2 | LMP2−/− mice | B cells + LPS | WB | ( |
| LMP2 | NOD and LMP2−/− mice | Splenocytes + TNF-α | WB | ( | |
| LMP2, MECL-1 | IBD patients | Isolated proteasomes from colonic mucosa | WB | ( | |
| LMP2, LMP7 | Cells lacking LMP2 and LMP7 | T2 cells + TNF-α | WB | ( | |
| LMP7 | ONX 0914 | Cardiomyocytes (murine) + IFN-γ/TNF-α | WB | ( | |
| LMP2, LMP7 | UK-101, LSK01 | Lung cells H23 (human) + TNF-α | WB | ( | |
| LMP7 | LMP7−/− mice, ONX 0914 | BM macrophages + LPS | WB | ( | |
| LMP2, LMP7, MECL-1 | LMP7−/− MECL-1−/− and LMP2−/− mice | Perit. Macrophages + IFN-γ/TNF-α or LPS, MEFs +IFN-γ/LPS | WB | ( | |
| NF-κB nuclear translocation and DNA binding—(C) | LMP2 | NOD and LMP2−/− mice | Splenocytes + TNF-α | EMSA | ( |
| LMP2, LMP7 | Cells lacking LMP2 and LMP7 | T2 cells + TNF-α | EMSA | ( | |
| LMP7 | LMP7−/− mice | MEFs +IFN-γ/TNF-α | IF | ( | |
| LMP7 | LMP7−/− mice | Cardiomyocytes + IFN-γ/TNF-α | TransAM® NFκB p50 | ( | |
| LMP7 | ONX 0914 | Cardiomyocytes (murine) + IFN-γ/TNF-α | WB | ( | |
| LMP7 | ONX 0914 | BM macrophages + LPS | TransAM® NFκB p50, WB | ( | |
| LMP2, LMP7 | UK-101, LSK01 | Lung cells H23 (human) + TNF-α | WB, IF, EMSA | ( | |
| LMP2, LMP7, MECL-1 | LMP7−/− MECL-1−/− and LMP2−/− mice | MEFs +IFN-γ/TNF-α | EMSA, TransAM® NFκB p65 | ( | |
| NF-κB promoter activity—(D) | LMP2, LMP7 | Cells lacking LMP2 and LMP7 | T2 cells + TNF-α | Luciferase assay | ( |
| LMP2 | UK-101 | Lung cells H23 + TNF-α | Luciferase assay | ( | |
| LMP7 | LSK01 | Lung cells H23 + TNF-α | Luciferase assay | ( | |
| LMP7 | ONX 0914 | Lung cells A549 + IFN-γ/TNF-α | Luciferase assay | ( | |
| LMP7 | ONX 0914 | Macrophages RAW264.7 (murine) + LPS | Luciferase assay | ( |
Known effects of the i-proteasome are summarized for each step of the NF-κB signaling pathway. These steps involve: (A) processing of the NF-κB p105 precursor protein, (B) IκBα degradation by the proteasome, (C) NF-κB nuclear translocation and DNA binding, and (D) NF-κB promoter activity, respectively (Figure .