Van Acker Gijs J D, Perides George, Weiss Eric R, Das Santasabuj, Tsichlis Philip N, Steer Michael L
Department of Surgery, Tufts University School of Medicine, Boston, MA 02111, USA.
J Biol Chem. 2007 Jul 27;282(30):22140-9. doi: 10.1074/jbc.M702225200. Epub 2007 May 30.
Pancreatic and lung inflammation during acute pancreatitis is a poorly understood, but clinically important, phenomenon. The proto-oncogene Tpl2 (tumor progression locus-2) has recently been shown to have important immunomodulatory effects on some inflammatory processes, but its importance to pancreatitis has not been previously examined. Our studies were designed to (a) define the effects of Tpl2 on pancreatic and lung inflammation during pancreatitis and (b) identify mechanisms and cell types responsible for those effects. We examined pancreatitis-associated Tpl2 effects in wild type and Tpl2(-/-) mice subjected to either secretagogue-induced or bile salt-induced pancreatitis. To determine the myeloid or non-myeloid lineage of cells responsible for the Tpl2 effects, we used Tpl2(-/-) chimeric mice generated by lethal irradiation followed by bone marrow transplantation. Mechanisms responsible for the effects of Tpl2 ablation on caerulein-induced proinflammatory events were evaluated under in vivo and in vitro conditions using the techniques of electrophoretic mobility shift assay, immunoblot analysis, and quantitative reverse transcription-PCR. We found that Tpl2 ablation markedly reduced pancreatic and lung inflammation in these two dissimilar models of pancreatitis, but it did not alter pancreatic injury/necrosis in either model. The reduction in caerulein-induced pancreatic inflammation is dependent upon Tpl2 ablation in non-myeloid cells and is associated with both in vivo and in vitro inhibition of MEK, JNK, and AP-1 activation and the expression of MCP-1, MIP-2, and interleukin-6. Non-myeloid cell expression of Tpl2 regulates pancreatic inflammation during pancreatitis by mediating proinflammatory signals and the generation of neutrophil chemoattracting factors.
急性胰腺炎期间胰腺和肺部的炎症是一种尚未被充分理解但在临床上很重要的现象。原癌基因Tpl2(肿瘤进展位点-2)最近被证明对某些炎症过程具有重要的免疫调节作用,但它对胰腺炎的重要性此前尚未得到研究。我们的研究旨在:(a)确定Tpl2对胰腺炎期间胰腺和肺部炎症的影响;(b)确定导致这些影响的机制和细胞类型。我们在接受促分泌素诱导或胆盐诱导的胰腺炎的野生型和Tpl2(-/-)小鼠中研究了与胰腺炎相关的Tpl2效应。为了确定负责Tpl2效应的细胞的髓系或非髓系谱系,我们使用了通过致死性照射后进行骨髓移植产生的Tpl2(-/-)嵌合小鼠。使用电泳迁移率变动分析、免疫印迹分析和定量逆转录-PCR技术,在体内和体外条件下评估了Tpl2缺失对蛙皮素诱导的促炎事件的影响机制。我们发现,在这两种不同的胰腺炎模型中,Tpl2缺失显著减轻了胰腺和肺部的炎症,但在两种模型中均未改变胰腺损伤/坏死。蛙皮素诱导的胰腺炎症的减轻依赖于非髓系细胞中的Tpl2缺失,并与体内和体外对MEK、JNK和AP-1激活以及MCP-1、MIP-2和白细胞介素-6表达的抑制有关。Tpl2在非髓系细胞中的表达通过介导促炎信号和中性粒细胞趋化因子的产生来调节胰腺炎期间的胰腺炎症。