| Literature DB >> 31379812 |
Carolina M Gorgulho1,2, Graziela G Romagnoli1, Rosh Bharthi2, Michael T Lotze2,3,4.
Abstract
Although much has been made of the role of HMGB1 acting as an acute damage associated molecular pattern (DAMP) molecule, prompting the response to tissue damage or injury, it is also released at sites of chronic inflammation including sites of infection, autoimmunity, and cancer. As such, the biology is distinguished from homeostasis and acute inflammation by the recruitment and persistence of myeloid derived suppressor cells, T regulatory cells, fibrosis and/or exuberant angiogenesis depending on the antecedents and the other individual inflammatory partners that HMGB1 binds and focuses, including IL-1β, CXCL12/SDF1, LPS, DNA, RNA, and sRAGE. High levels of HMGB1 released into the extracellular milieu and its persistence in the microenvironment can contribute to the pathogenesis of many if not all autoimmune disorders and is a key factor that drives inflammation further and worsens symptoms. HMGB1 is also pivotal in the maintenance of chronic inflammation and a "wound healing" type of immune response that ultimately contributes to the onset of carcinogenesis and tumor progression. Exosomes carrying HMGB1 and other instructive molecules are released and shape the response of various cells in the chronic inflammatory environment. Understanding the defining roles of REDOX, DAMPs and PAMPs, and the host response in chronic inflammation requires an alternative means for positing HMGB1's central role in limiting and focusing inflammation, distinguishing chronic from acute inflammation.Entities:
Keywords: HMGB1; autoimmunity; autophagy; cancer; chronic inflammation
Year: 2019 PMID: 31379812 PMCID: PMC6660267 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2019.01561
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1HMGB1 exerts differential roles in homeostasis and chronic inflammation. As shown in blue, HMGB1 is predominantly located in the nucleus of cells in the setting of homeostasis, where it promotes nucleosomal stability and facilitates access of transcriptional factors to DNA. In chronic inflammation (green), HMGB1 leaves the nucleus to drive autophagy in the cytoplasm and act as a DAMP in the extracellular milieu. Shown above are the relative proportion of HMGB1 in individual compartments during homeostasis and chronic inflammation. N, nucleus; C, cytoplasm; E, extracellular.
HMGB1 expression and subcellular localization in epithelial human cancers.
| NSCLC | Serum | – | Advanced | n/a | Serum HMGB-1 negatively correlated with response to chemotherapy and survival ( | ( |
| NSCLC | Tissue | – | Advanced | n/a ( | Significant association observed between the gene expression levels of HMGB1 and MMP-9 ( | ( |
| NSCLC | Tissue | + | Advanced ( | Mainly cytoplasm ( | Low HMGB1 associated with poor immune activation | ( |
| BREAST | Tissue | + ( | I-IV ( | Nucleus ( | Less differentiated carcinoma presented more diffused localization of HMGB1 in the nucleus ( | ( |
| BREAST | Serum | – | Advanced | n/a | High pre-chemotherapy HMGB1 levels predicted a later therapy response | ( |
| CRC | Tissue | – | Advanced | Nucleus ( | Less differentiated carcinoma presented more diffused localization of HMGB1 in the nucleus ( | ( |
| CRC | Serum | – | Advanced and Early ( | n/a | No correlation between serum HMGB1 and patient survival ( | ( |
| ESOPHAGEAL | Serum | – | I-IV | n/a | HMGB1 increment after neoadjuvant chemotherapy; | ( |
| ESOPHAGEAL | Serum | + | I-IV | n/a | HMGB1 linked to immunogenic cell death | ( |
| ESOPHAGEAL | Tissue | – | I-III | Both | HMGB1 expression positively correlated with expression of VEGF-C, lymph node metastasis, MLD and stage | ( |
| PANCREATIC | Tissue | – | Advanced and Early | Mainly nucleus | The combination of HMGB1+/HMGB2− expression linked to poor prognosis | ( |
| PANCREATIC | Tissue | + | Advanced and Early | Mainly nucleus | Diminished nuclear and total cellular expression of HMGB1 in PDAC correlates with poor overall survival | ( |
| PANCREATIC | Serum | – | Advanced and Early | n/a | HMGB1 as a potential diagnostic biomarker for PDAC ( | ( |
NSCLC, non-small cell lung carcinoma; n/a, not applicable; n/s, not specified; TIL, tumor infiltrating lymphocytes; DCs, dendritic cells; MMP-9, matrix metalloproteinase; VEGF-C, vascular endothelial growth factor C; MLD, micro-lymphatic vessel density.
HMGB1-mediated autophagy is controlled by microRNAs.
| miR-410-3p | NPPC | PDAC | Chemosensitization via inhibition of HMGB1-mediated autophagy | ( |
| miR-34-a | MDM4 | AML, retinoblastoma | Chemosensitization via inhibition of HMGB1-mediated autophagy | ( |
| miR-142-3p | BOD1 | AML | Chemosensitization via inhibition of HMGB1-mediated autophagy | ( |
| miR-142-3p | BOD1 | NSCLC | Chemosensitization via inhibition of HMGB1-mediated autophagy | ( |
| miR-129-5p | CACNG2 | Breast | Chemosensitization via inhibition of HMGB1-mediated autophagy | ( |
| miR-218 | TUB | Endometrial | Chemosensitization via inhibition of HMGB1-mediated autophagy | ( |
| miR-22 | PCDH15 | Osteosarcoma | Chemosensitization via inhibition of HMGB1-mediated autophagy; Inhibition of proliferation, migration and invasion of tumor cells ( | ( |
| miR-200c | GNG13 | NSCLC | Chemosensitization via inhibition of HMGB1-mediated autophagy | ( |
| miR-129-2 | BDKRB2 | Glioma | Chemosensitization via inhibition of HMGB1-mediated autophagy | ( |
| miR-505 | CLEC2A | HCC | Inhibition of HMGB1-mediated DNA repair and inactivation of Akt pathway | ( |
| miR-141 | DST | Acute pancreatitits | Inhibition of HMGB1-mediated autophagy may decrease tissue injury | ( |
PDAC, pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma; AML, acute myeloid leukemia; NSCLC, non-small cell lung carcinoma; HCC, hepatocellular carcinoma; Human predicted targets retrieved from the TargetScan and miRDB databases.