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by Apoptotic Cells Prevents Lipopolysaccharide-Induced NCoR Removal from
B Binding Sites Mediating Transrepression of Proinflammatory Cytokines1
* Institute of Biochemistry I/Zentrum für Arzneimittelforschung, -Entwicklung und -Sicherheit (ZAFES), Faculty of Medicine, Goethe-University Frankfurt am Main, Frankfurt, Germany; and
Laboratory of Metabolism, National Cancer Institute, Bethesda, MD 20892
| Abstract |
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(PPAR
) coordinates antiinflammatory responses following its activation by AC. Exposing murine RAW264.7 macrophages to AC before LPS stimulation reduced NF-
B transactivation and lowered target gene expression of, that is, TNF-
and IL-6 compared with controls. In macrophages overexpressing a dominant negative mutant of PPAR
, NF-
B transactivation in response to LPS was restored, while macrophages from myeloid lineage-specific conditional PPAR
knockout mice proved that PPAR
transmitted an antiinflammatory response, which was delivered by AC. Expressing a PPAR
-
aa32–250 deletion mutant, we observed no inhibition of NF-
B. Analyzing the PPAR
domain structures within aa 32–250, we anticipated PPAR
sumoylation in mediating the antiinflammatory effect in response to AC. Interfering with sumoylation of PPAR
by mutating the predicted sumoylation site (K77R), or knockdown of the small ubiquitin-like modifier (SUMO) E3 ligase PIAS1 (protein inhibitor of activated STAT1), eliminated the ability of AC to suppress NF-
B. Chromatin immunoprecipitation analysis demonstrated that AC prevented the LPS-induced removal of nuclear receptor corepressor (NCoR) from the
B site within the TNF-
promoter. We conclude that AC induce PPAR
sumoylation to attenuate the removal of NCoR, thereby blocking transactivation of NF-
B. This contributes to an antiinflammatory phenotype shift in macrophages responding to AC by lowering proinflammatory cytokine production. | Introduction |
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, IL-1β, and IL-6 (1). AC block NF-
B activation, which contributes to the diminished production of proinflammatory cytokines, although mechanisms of how NF-
B is inhibited remain unclear (5). Cvetanovic and Ucker demonstrated that an attenuated NF-
B transactivation response and an AC-elicited reduction in target gene expression are cell-cell contact-dependent but phosphatidylserine-independent (6). Furthermore, it was noticed that NF-
B binding to DNA as well as I
B degradation were not affected by AC. As an alternative explanation, it was proposed that a limited amount of p300, an established co-factor of NF-
B-dependent proinflammatory gene expression (7), decreases its activity, although underlying mechanisms remain obscure (5). A potential candidate known to interact with p300 and thereby attenuating an inflammatory response is peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor
(PPAR
) (8).
PPAR
belongs to the nuclear hormone receptor superfamily of ligand-activated transcription factors and originally has been characterized to be important for adipogenesis and glucose metabolism (9). Induction of PPAR
target genes requires ligand binding, heterodimerization with the retinoid X receptor (RXR), and subsequent binding to specific peroxisome proliferator response elements. Besides transcriptional activation, PPAR
also suppresses gene induction. In macrophages, active PPAR
attenuates the production of various inflammatory mediators such as NO, TNF-
, IL-1β, IL-12, and matrix metalloproteinase-9 (MMP-9) (10). Several mechanisms are proposed to explain the suppressive role of PPAR
. It is assumed that PPAR
competes for limiting amounts of proinflammatory transcriptional coactivators, directly binds transcription factors, interferes with the MAPK cascade (11), and/or prevents the removal of corepressors from promoter regions of proinflammatory target genes (12). Coactivator/corepressor exchange is a common mechanism controlling the switch from gene repression to gene activation, and vice versa. This mechanism is regulated by the removal of corepressors, their degradation by the ubiquitination/19S proteasome machinery, or recruitment of coactivators. Sumoylated PPAR
was shown to prevent nuclear receptor corepressor (NCoR) removal, thereby attenuating LPS-induced gene expression. Sumoylation is mediated by the E2 ligase Ubc9 and the small ubiquitin-like modifier (SUMO) E3 ligase protein inhibitor of activated STAT1 (PIAS1) (12).
Given the interest in macrophage polarization in response to AC, we were intrigued to define a potential link between activation of PPAR
and inhibition of NF-
B transactivation. We provide evidence that AC attenuate transactivation of NF-
B and associated target gene activation. In macrophages overexpressing a dominant/negative (d/n) mutant of PPAR
, inhibition of NF-
B no longer occurred, with the further notion that sumoylation of PPAR
at K77 prevents the LPS-induced removal of the NCoR- histone deacetylase (HDAC)3 complex from the NF-
B site of proinflammatory target gene promoters, that is, TNF-
.
| Materials and Methods |
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Staurosporine and LPS (from Escherichia coli, serotype 0127:B8) were purchased from Sigma-Aldrich. GW9662 and trichostatin A were bought from Alexis Biochemicals. Murine M-CSF was purchased from PeproTech. Oligonucleotides were obtained from Biomers. Cell culture supplements, FCS, and medium came from PAA Laboratories.
Cell culture and generation of apoptotic Jurkat cells
RAW264.7 mouse macrophages, RAW264.7 d/n PPAR
macrophages, and Jurkat cells were cultured at 37°C, 5% CO2 in RPMI 1640 supplemented with 10% FCS, 100 µg/ml streptomycin, and 100 U/ml penicillin. To generate apoptotic Jurkat cells, they were cultured in FCS-free medium and stimulated with 0.5 µg/ml staurosporine for 3 h, thereby provoking
80% apoptotic cell death, as previously described (13). Afterward, cells were washed twice with medium to remove staurosporine. For coculture, AC were resuspended in medium containing FCS and added to macrophages at a ratio of 5:1. Following experiments, but before sample preparation, noningested AC were removed and macrophages washed twice with PBS, excluding variations on results by AC as described earlier (3).
Conditional PPAR
knockout mice, isolation of CD11b+ splenocytes, and differentiation and culture of primary murine macrophages
C57BL/6 LysMCre mice (LysMCre+/+) were bred with C57BL/6 PPAR
floxed/floxed (PPAR
fl/fl) mice (14) as previously described (15). Genotypes were determined by PCR of tail DNA, and deletion of PPAR
was confirmed by analysis of PPAR
exon 2 mRNA levels in macrophages (14, 16, 17).
Spleens from PPAR
fl/fl and LysMCre+/+/PPAR
fl/fl mice were removed to prepare single-cell suspensions. CD11b+ splenocytes were isolated by MACS separation using an autoMACS system (Miltenyi Biotec) following the manufacturers instructions. For differentiation of CD11b+ splenocytes, cells were cultured in RPMI 1640 supplemented with 10% FCS, 100 µg/ml streptomycin, 100 U/ml penicillin, nonessential amino acids, sodium pyruvate, and 25 ng/ml M-CSF for 5 days. Animal experiments followed the guidelines of the Hessian animal care and use committee.
Western blot analysis
RAW264.7 macrophages (3 x 106) were cultured in 10-cm dishes 1 day before experiments. The following day cells were treated with AC for 90 min, followed by stimulation with 1 µg/ml LPS for 1 h. Cell lysis and Western blot analysis was performed as described (18). An anti-PPAR
Ab (1/2000, H100-X from Santa Cruz Biotechnology) and anti-β-tubulin (1/1000, Sigma-Aldrich) were used. Detection and densitometric analysis were performed using the Odyssey infrared imaging system (LI-COR Biosciences).
Vector construction, transient transfection, and reporter assay
To restore PPAR
signaling, a PPAR
1 overexpression vector (pcDNA3-PPAR
1 wild-type kindly provided by V. K. K. Chatterjee, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, U.K.) was used. Overexpression vector pDsRed-Monomer-C1-PPAR
1 wild-type and deletion constructs of DsRed-Monomer-C1-PPAR
1 were previously generated in our laboratory (13). pDsRed-Monomer-C1-PPAR
1 wild-type was also used for mutation of the sumoylation site (K77R). Mutation was performed with the QuikChange XLII site-directed mutagenesis kit (Stratagene) using the following primer (changed nucleotides are underlined): 5'-GAGTACCAAA GTGCAATCAGAGTGGAGCCTGC-3'.
For reporter analysis, 5 x 104/well RAW264.7 and RAW264.7 d/n PPAR
macrophages were seeded in 24-well plates. The next day, cells were transfected with 1 µg/well pNF-
B-Luc or cotransfected with 0.5 µg pNF-
B-Luc and 0.5 µg of one of the overexpressing vectors/well, respectively, using jetPEI transfection reagent (Polyplus Transfection) as described by the manufacturer. The reporter plasmid contains three
B sites and was described earlier (19). After transfection, cells were cultured in fresh medium for another 24 h before treatments. All reporter assays were performed in duplicate. Cell extracts were prepared after coincubation with AC for 90 min and following LPS (1 µg/ml) stimulation for 5 h. Luciferase activity was normalized to protein concentration of each sample. To control transfection efficiency concerning overexpression of the different pDsRed-PPAR
1 constructs, mRNA levels of DsRed were determined by quantitative PCR.
For small interfering RNA (siRNA) experiments, 2 x 106 RAW264.7 macrophages were transfected with 3 µg siRNA (ON-TARGETplus SMARTpool siRNA against NCoR or PIAS1 from Thermo Scientific) using the Nucleofector technology from Amaxa Biosystems according to the manufacturers protocol. For controls, cells were transfected with AllStars negative control siRNA (Qiagen). Knockdown was analyzed on mRNA level by quantitative PCR.
Quantitative PCR
Cells were pretreated with AC for 90 min, followed by stimulation with 1 µg/ml LPS for 3 h. Total RNA was isolated using PeqGold RNAPure kit (PeqLab Biotechnologie) as described by the manufacturer. Reverse transcription was done with 1 µg of RNA using an iScript cDNA synthesis kit (Bio-Rad). Quantitative PCR was performed with Absolute QPCR SYBR Green fluorescein mix (ABgene, Hamburg, Germany) according to the manufacturers protocol. Amplification and data analysis were performed using MyiQ iCylcer system from Bio-Rad. The following primer pairs were selected for quantitative PCR: TNF-
forward, 5'-CCATTCCTGAGTTCT GCAAAGG-3', reverse: 5'-AAGTAGGAAGGCCTGAGATCTTATC-3'; IL-6 forward, 5'-GAACAACGATGATGCACTTGC-3', reverse, 5'-TCTCTGAAGGACTCT GGCTTTG-3'; PPAR
exon 2 forward, 5'-CACAGAGATGCCATTCTGGC-3', reverse, 5'-GGCCTGTTGTAGAGCTGGGT-3'; DsRed forward, 5'-GAGGTGCAGCAG GACTCCTC-3', reverse, 5'-TGGCCTTGTACACGTCTTG-3'; GAPDH forward, 5'-CTCATGACCA CAGTCCATGC-3', reverse, 5'-TTCAGCTCTGGGATGACCTT-3'. For determination of actin, NCoR1 and PIAS1 mRNA levels we used QuantiTect primer assays (Qiagen). Values were normalized to GAPDH or actin expression.
Chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) assay
RAW264.7 (3 x 106) cells were seeded in 10-cm plates and cultured overnight. Before crosslinking, cells were pretreated with AC (90 min) followed by 1 µg/ml LPS (1 h) afterward. ChIP assays were performed as described by Nelson et al. (20). For each sample we crosslinked cells combined from three 10-cm plates. NCoR was precipitated using 1 µg of anti-NCoR from Affinity BioReagents, an established ChIP assay Ab (12). A 211-bp fragment of the TNF-
promoter spanning an established
B response element (21) was amplified. For mock immunoprecipitation we used 1 µg of normal rabbit IgG from Millipore/Upstate Biotechnology (Billerica). Fifteen percent DNA of each probe was used for input controls. The following primers were used: ChIP-TNF-
forward, 5'-GGCTTGTGAG GTCCGTGAAT-3', reverse, 5'-GAAAGCTGGGTGCATAAGGG-3'.
Statistical analysis
Each experiment was performed at least three times and statistical analysis was done with one- or two-way ANOVA modified with Bonferronis multiple comparison test, respectively. In the case of ChIP assay and Western blot analysis representative data of at least three independently performed experiments are shown (*, p < 0.05; **, p < 0.01; ***, p < 0.001).
| Results |
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attenuates NF-
B transactivation and target gene expression in response to AC
To investigate whether AC activate PPAR
, thereby blocking NF-
B transactivation, we performed NF-
B reporter assays in RAW264.7, compared with RAW264.7 macrophages expressing a d/n PPAR
mutant (3). The mutant is characterized by two amino acid substitutions (L468A/E471A), which impair ligand-dependent PPAR
transactivation and the interaction with coactivators such as p300 (22). Macrophages were coincubated with AC at a ratio of 1:5 for 90 min and then stimulated with 1 µg/ml LPS for 5 h. LPS stimulation caused an
3-fold induction of reporter activity compared with controls, that is, resting cells (data not shown). Following the interaction with AC, NF-
B-dependent transactivation in RAW264.7 macrophages was reduced by
50% compared with LPS stimulation (Fig. 1A). Inhibition was completely reversed in RAW264.7 d/n PPAR
-expressing cells, suggesting a causative role of PPAR
in reducing NF-
B activation. To prove the importance of PPAR
, we overexpressed PPAR
1 wild-type in RAW264.7 d/n PPAR
macrophages to restore its functionality. This was achieved by transfecting RAW264.7 d/n PPAR
macrophages with the NF-
B reporter plasmid in combination with a PPAR
1 wild-type encoding vector. As expected, overexpression of PPAR
1 wild-type in d/n PPAR
macrophages restored the inhibitory potency of AC on NF-
B transactivation, with the notion that inhibition was comparable to control cells (Fig. 1A). To further strengthen the role of PPAR
, RAW264.7 cells were prestimulated for 3 h with 1 µM GW9662, a specific PPAR
antagonist (23). Thereafter, macrophages were exposed to AC followed by LPS stimulation as described above. GW9662 completely abrogated the ability of AC to block NF-
B reporter activity (Fig. 1B), but it did not alter the LPS response (data not shown). These data suggest a role of PPAR
in blocking NF-
B transactivation in response to AC. To exclude variations in PPAR
expression accounting for alterations seen under our conditions, we checked PPAR
expression by Western blot analysis. Neither LPS nor AC changed the expression of PPAR
in RAW264.7 macrophages (Fig. 1C).
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B inhibition, we analyzed the expression of proinflammatory, established NF-
B target genes such as TNF-
(21) and IL-6 (24) in macrophages treated with AC and LPS. To this end, we determined IL-6 and TNF-
mRNA amount by quantitative PCR in RAW264.7 and RAW264.7 d/n PPAR
macrophages. Cells were coincubated with AC for 90 min and treated with 1 µg/ml LPS for 3 h afterward. In response to LPS, mRNA expression of TNF-
and IL-6 was at least 50-fold increased compared with unstimulated cells and this response was set to a relative mRNA increase of 1 (Fig. 2, A and B). Recognition of AC by RAW264.7 macrophages before stimulation with LPS reduced TNF-
expression by
60% (Fig. 2A), while IL-6 mRNA expression was diminished by 90% (Fig. 2B). To substantiate a role of PPAR
, experiments were also performed in RAW264.7 d/n PPAR
macrophages. Pretreating cells with AC, followed by LPS stimulation, restored TNF-
expression (Fig. 2A) and largely reversed suppressed formation of IL-6 (Fig. 2B), thus underscoring the impact of PPAR
on NF-
B target gene expression. To verify the physiological significance of PPAR
for the antiinflammatory response, we analyzed TNF-
mRNA levels in primary murine macrophages from PPAR
fl/fl (control) and myeloid lineage-specific conditional PPAR
knockout mice (Mac-PPAR
KO). CD11b+ splenocytes were differentiated with 25 ng M-CSF for 5 days. Knockout of PPAR
was proven by quantifying the PPAR
exon 2 mRNA amount, which was reduced in PPAR
-deficient macrophages by 90% (Fig. 2C). Following their differentiation, macrophages were treated with AC and LPS as described. Recognition of AC diminished LPS-induced TNF-
expression by
80%. This reduction was significantly mitigated in PPAR
knockout macrophages (Fig. 2D), supporting the notion of a PPAR
-dependent antiinflammatory phenotype switch in response to AC.
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domains required for NF-
B inhibition
With the following experiments we explored mechanisms of PPAR
-mediated transrepression of NF-
B activity. This was accomplished by NF-
B reporter assays in RAW264.7 d/n PPAR
macrophages overexpressing various deletion constructs of DsRed-tagged PPAR
1 that were previously verified for their expression by Western blot analysis (18). The DsRed-PPAR
1 wild-type encoding vector was included as a control. As expected, overexpression of DsRed-PPAR
1 wild-type restored NF-
B inhibition in response to AC in comparison to RAW264.7 d/n PPAR
macrophages (Fig. 3A). Overexpression of DsRed-PPAR
1-
aa32–250 failed to restore the ability of AC to inhibit NF-
B transactivation, comparable to the situation seen in RAW264.7 d/n PPAR
cells (Fig. 3A). Amino acids 32–250 of PPAR
span a region of the ligand-independent activation domain AF1, the DNA binding domain, and a part of the hinge domain. From the results we concluded that besides the AF2 domain, which is responsible for ligand binding, amino acids within the region 32–250 are needed to inhibit NF-
B. Next, we showed that overexpression of DsRed-PPAR
1-
aa309–319, a PPAR
deletion construct lacking a region that appears to be important for cofactor binding (25, 26), restored NF-
B inhibition (Fig. 3A). These data suggest that amino acids 309–319, within the ligand-binding domain, are dispensable for blocking NF-
B transactivation in response to AC, whereas amino acids 32–250 seem to play a role. Considering that sumoylation of PPAR
and concomitant prevention of NCoR removal is a postulated mechanism for transrepression, we analyzed protein motives and noticed a possible sumoylation site at K77 within the AF1 domain. Therefore, we reasoned that sumoylation of PPAR
may contribute to block NF-
B transactivation.
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prevents the removal of NCoR from NF-
B binding sites
Interfering with the removal of NCoR from promoter regions of different proinflammatory genes such as inducible NO synthase (iNOS) has been described as a mechanism for PPAR
-mediated transrepression that occurs after sumoylation of PPAR
(12). Among other proteins, HDAC3 is associated to the corepressor complex mediating transcriptional repression (27). In a first approach we inhibited HDAC3 to see whether the NCoR/HDAC3 complex might be involved in blocking NF-
B activity. RAW264.7 macrophages were pretreated with 10 nM of the histone deacetylase inhibitor trichostatin A (TSA) 1 h before AC addition, followed by LPS stimulation and subsequent determination of NF-
B reporter activity. In the presence of TSA, NF-
B was not any longer inhibited by AC, whereas TSA alone did not alter the LPS response (supplemental Fig. S1).4 Although this experiment may suggest HDAC-mediated NF-
B inhibition, it remains unclear whether PPAR
is sumoylated and concomitantly retains NCoR bound at the promoter. Taking into consideration that amino acids 32–250 are involved (Fig. 3A), we reasoned K77 to be sumoylated. To approach this possibility, we mutated the sumoylation site (K77R) in the pDsRed-PPAR
1 wild-type encoding vector. Experimentally, we performed NF-
B reporter assays in the RAW264.7 d/n PPAR
macrophages and overexpressed DsRed-PPAR
1-K77R and DsRed-PPAR
1 wild-type. Along with our expectations, the K77R-mutated protein was unable to restore NF-
B inhibition compared with the DsRed-PPAR
1 wild-type protein (Fig. 3A). As PIAS1 mediates PPAR
sumoylation (12), we knocked down PIAS1 by siRNA to abrogate PPAR
sumoylation and analyzed its relevance in attenuating TNF-
expression in response to AC. Two days after transfection of siRNA, RAW264.7 cells were exposed to AC and LPS as described above, and TNF-
as well as PIAS1 mRNA levels were determined by quantitative PCR. AC reduced LPS-induced TNF-
formation in RAW264.7 macrophages transfected with control siRNA. In comparison, PIAS1 knockdown of
50% at the mRNA level did not affect LPS-induced TNF-
expression, but it significantly reduced the ability of AC to attenuate TNF-
mRNA expression (Fig. 3B). Therefore, lowering PPAR
sumoylation attenuates an AC-provoked antiinflammatory phenotype shift. To verify that sumoylated PPAR
prevents NCoR removal to inhibit NF-
B, we analyzed the relevance of NCoR for AC to block NF-
B by siRNA knockdown of NCoR. As a result of transfection, the extent of TNF-
induction by LPS was reduced, while NCoR expression remained unchanged by transfection with control siRNA compared with nontransfected cells. In control siRNA transfected cells recognition of AC reduced LPS-induced TNF-
expression by
50%, whereas knockdown of NCoR by
50%, as determined by quantitative PCR (data not shown), significantly reverted TNF-
expression (Fig. 4A). To verify that sumoylated PPAR
affects the occupancy of NF-
B sites by NCoR, we examined the association of NCoR within the TNF-
promoter by ChIP analysis. RAW264.7 and RAW264.7 d/n PPAR
macrophages were pretreated with AC for 90 min and stimulated with 1 µg/ml LPS for 1 h afterward or remained as controls. Under control conditions, NCoR associated with the NF-
B site of the TNF-
promoter and it was cleared from that promoter region in response to LPS in the wild-type as well as in d/n PPAR
overexpressing macrophages (Fig. 4, B and C). In RAW264.7 macrophages, NCoR remained bound to the promoter after recognition of AC despite LPS stimulation, whereas in RAW264.7 d/n PPAR
macrophages NCoR was cleared from the promoter in response to AC, followed by LPS stimulation. These effects were statistically significant (Fig. 4D).
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sumoylation in response to AC regulates the activity of NF-
B via NCoR, which contributes to immune modulation of macrophages. | Discussion |
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was recently implicated in macrophage polarization provoked by IL-4. The reduced production of proinflammatory cytokines such as IL-6 and the enhanced expression of the mannose receptor as a differentiation marker were attributed to PPAR
-mediated suppression or gene induction (28). Besides IL-4, AC also induce a switch of macrophages toward an alternatively activated phenotype, although underlying mechanisms are insufficiently clear. We provide evidence that PPAR
gets activated, most likely sumoylated, in response to AC, which is essential for blocking NF-
B transactivation. Our basic observation that AC attenuate LPS-induced NF-
B transactivation is in line with the work of Cvetanovic and Ucker, who demonstrated a diminished NF-
B activity in response to AC (5). The notion that PPAR
not only inhibits NF-
B (29, 30, 31) but also is activated by AC (3) stimulated our interest in identifying underlying molecular mechanisms. We followed a molecular and pharmacological approach to establish the contributing role of PPAR
by using cells that express a d/n mutant of PPAR
. This mutant carries two amino acid substitutions in the AF2 domain (L468A/E471A) of the protein, which impair ligand-dependent PPAR
transactivation and the interaction with coactivators, for example, p300 (22). In RAW264.7 d/n PPAR
macrophages, inhibition of NF-
B in response to AC was completely relieved. As a proof of concept, functionality in RAW264.7 d/n PPAR
macrophages was restored by overexpressing PPAR
1 wild-type, which again suppressed NF-
B reporter activity in response to AC. Pharmacologically, the impact of PPAR
was further corroborated by using GW9662 to antagonize PPAR
, which restored NF-
B reporter activity after adding AC to macrophages. During these studies AC were cocultured with macrophages for 6.5 h, which comprises a 90-min preincubation period with AC, followed by LPS stimulation for 5 h. During the entire incubation period AC remained in the medium, without removing noningested cells. However, removing nonphagocytosed cells after 30 min followed by LPS stimulation failed to block NF-
B activity (data not shown). Variations in the stimulation regimes of macrophages with AC may affect macrophage plasticity. Majai et al. observed that a treatment of cells with LPS for 30 min, incubations with AC for 25 min, followed by removing noningested cells lowered the amount of TNF-
when measured 18–24 h later (32). This response was not antagonized by GW9662. Likely, proinflammatory stimuli given to macrophages before confronting them with AC might activate distinct pathways (e.g., receptor desensitization) that contribute to the diversity of antiinflammatory responses, with the further possibility that short vs long incubation periods differ toward the involvement of PPAR
.
To verify the inhibitory role of PPAR
in our system, we not only followed NF-
B reporter activity, but also searched for the expression of NF-
B downstream target genes, that is, TNF-
and IL-6. Their expression was reduced in response to AC in RAW264.7 and primary murine macrophages, but cytokine formation was partially in the case of IL-6 and fully reversed in the case of TNF-
when exposing d/n PPAR
cells to AC. Supporting evidence came from experiments in PPAR
knockout macrophages, where the inhibitory effect of AC on NF-
B activity was restored. These data support conclusions by Odegaard et al., who used macrophages from PPAR
knockout mice to show that activation of PPAR
by IL-4 attenuated IL-6 expression (28). Additionally, the role of PPAR
for macrophage polarization is further corroborated by Bouhlel et al., who showed that IL-4 switches the macrophage phenotype toward an antiinflammatory one by activating PPAR
(33). Moreover, IL-13 activates PPAR
to generate an antiinflammatory macrophage phenotype (28, 34).
Despite mounting evidence for a role of PPAR
in macrophage polarization, molecular mechanisms explaining repression of NF-
B, one crucial transcription factor regulating the inflammatory repertoire of macrophages, by AC are ill defined. Proposed strategies of how PPAR
represses NF-
B include competition with coactivators or inhibition of corepressor clearance (10). To approach mechanisms, we analyzed domains of PPAR
being involved. DsRed-PPAR
1 wild-type as well as DsRed-PPAR
1-
aa309–319 attenuated NF-
B activity in response to AC. Considering that amino acids 309–319 are required for binding transcriptional coactivators (25, 26), this ruled out a simple coactivator scavenging of, for example, p300, to explain inhibition of NF-
B. Interestingly, overexpression of DsRed-PPAR
1-
aa32–250 restored NF-
B transactivation, compared with the action of DsRed-PPAR
1 wild-type. Deleted amino acids in PPAR
1-
aa32–250 span a part of the AF1 domain, the DNA binding domain, and a part of the hinge domain and thus contain a predicted sumoylation site at K77. Sumoylation of PPAR
attenuates NF-
B target gene expression by preventing NCoR removal from NF-
B binding sites in various promoter regions of target genes such as iNOS (12). NCoR is a component of a corepressor complex, containing transducin β-like protein-1 (TBL1), TBLR1, and HDAC3, with the latter one mediating transcriptional repression (27). A potential role for the NCoR-associated HDAC3 was supposed when the HDAC inhibitor TSA reversed PPAR
-dependent repression of iNOS (12). In analogy, TSA reversed inhibition of NF-
B by AC, suggesting that a similar mechanism might operate in response to AC. ChIP analysis confirmed that NCoR is cleared from the NF-
B site within the TNF-
promoter after LPS stimulation, but remained bound when macrophages were prestimulated with AC. Pascual et al. noticed that sumoylated PPAR
suppressed the NF-
B target gene iNOS (12). The model predicts that NCoR/HDAC3 associates with
B binding sites along with TBL1 and TBLR1, which are required for ubiquitination of NCoR in response to proinflammatory stimuli (35). Following sumoylation, PPAR
binds to NCoR/HDAC3 and prevents the recruitment of the ubiquitination/19S proteasome machinery that normally degrades the corepressor complex. This scenario requires ligand-dependent PPAR
activation and K365 sumoylation (12). PPAR
contains two possible sumoylation sites at K77 and K365, and our experiments with the PPAR
aa 32–250 deletion fragment pointed to the involvement of K77 rather than K365. Indeed, overexpression of DsRed-PPAR
1-K77R in RAW264.7 d/n PPAR
cells failed to restore NF-
B respression, indicating that sumoylation of PPAR
at K77 represses NF-
B transactivation. Our studies do not rule out the possibility that PPAR
is also sumoylated at K365, but at least this would not to be sufficient for NF-
B inhibition under our experimental conditions. Furthermore, knockdown of the SUMO E3 ligase PIAS1, which mediates PPAR
sumoylation (12), reversed the inhibitory ability of AC. In the future, it will require new imaginative experiments to understand how AC sumoylate PPAR
.
It is becoming more and more evident that PPAR
essentially contributes to a macrophage phenotype shift. Our data suggest that this signaling circuit operates under conditions when AC reprogram immune functions of macrophages, exemplified by an altered NF-
B-mediated target gene expression profile. We propose that sumoylated PPAR
attenuates NF-
B transactivation in response to AC by preventing NCoR corepressor displacement. This helps to understand how AC affect the remarkable plasticity of macrophages associated with decreased proinflammatory cytokine production.
| Disclosures |
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| Footnotes |
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1 This work was supported by grants from Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (Br 999, FOG 784, Excellence Cluster Cardiopulmonary System), Deutsche Krebshilfe, Sander Foundation, LiFF, and European Community (PROLIGEN). ![]()
2 Address correspondence and reprint requests to Dr. Bernhard Brüne, Goethe-University Frankfurt am Main, Faculty of Medicine, Institute of Biochemistry I/Zentrum für Arzneimittelforschung, -Entwicklung und –Sicherheit (ZAFES), Pathobiochemistry, Theodor-Stern-Kai 7, 60590 Frankfurt, Germany. E-mail address: bruene{at}zbc.kgu.de ![]()
3 Abbreviations used in this paper: AC, apoptotic cells; ChIP, chromatin immunoprecipitation; d/n, dominant negative; HDAC, histone deacetylase; iNOS, inducible NO synthase; NCoR, nuclear receptor corepressor; PIAS1, protein inhibitor of activated STAT1; PPAR
, peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor
; siRNA, small interfering RNA; TBL1, transducin β-like protein-1; TSA, trichostatin A. ![]()
4 The online version of this article contains supplemental material. ![]()
Received for publication February 14, 2008. Accepted for publication August 15, 2008.
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