Choi Hyong Woo, Tian Miaoying, Song Fei, Venereau Emilie, Preti Alessandro, Park Sang-Wook, Hamilton Keith, Swapna G V T, Manohar Murli, Moreau Magali, Agresti Alessandra, Gorzanelli Andrea, De Marchis Francesco, Wang Huang, Antonyak Marc, Micikas Robert J, Gentile Daniel R, Cerione Richard A, Schroeder Frank C, Montelione Gaetano T, Bianchi Marco E, Klessig Daniel F
Boyce Thompson Institute for Plant Research, Ithaca, New York, United States of America.
Center of Advanced Biotechnology and Medicine, Department of Molecular Biology and Biochemistry, and Northeast Structural Genomics Consortium, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, Piscataway, New Jersey, United States of America.
Mol Med. 2015 Jun 18;21(1):526-35. doi: 10.2119/molmed.2015.00148.
Salicylic acid (SA) and its derivatives have been used for millennia to reduce pain, fever and inflammation. In addition, prophylactic use of acetylsalicylic acid, commonly known as aspirin, reduces the risk of heart attack, stroke and certain cancers. Because aspirin is rapidly de-acetylated by esterases in human plasma, much of aspirin's bioactivity can be attributed to its primary metabolite, SA. Here we demonstrate that human high mobility group box 1 (HMGB1) is a novel SA-binding protein. SA-binding sites on HMGB1 were identified in the HMG-box domains by nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopic studies and confirmed by mutational analysis. Extracellular HMGB1 is a damage-associated molecular pattern molecule (DAMP), with multiple redox states. SA suppresses both the chemoattractant activity of fully reduced HMGB1 and the increased expression of proinflammatory cytokine genes and cyclooxygenase 2 (COX-2) induced by disulfide HMGB1. Natural and synthetic SA derivatives with greater potency for inhibition of HMGB1 were identified, providing proof-of-concept that new molecules with high efficacy against sterile inflammation are attainable. An HMGB1 protein mutated in one of the SA-binding sites identified by NMR chemical shift perturbation studies retained chemoattractant activity, but lost binding of and inhibition by SA and its derivatives, thereby firmly establishing that SA binding to HMGB1 directly suppresses its proinflammatory activities. Identification of HMGB1 as a pharmacological target of SA/aspirin provides new insights into the mechanisms of action of one of the world's longest and most used natural and synthetic drugs. It may also provide an explanation for the protective effects of low-dose aspirin usage.
水杨酸(SA)及其衍生物数千年来一直被用于减轻疼痛、发热和炎症。此外,预防性使用乙酰水杨酸(俗称阿司匹林)可降低心脏病发作、中风和某些癌症的风险。由于阿司匹林在人血浆中会被酯酶迅速脱乙酰化,阿司匹林的许多生物活性可归因于其主要代谢产物SA。在此,我们证明人类高迁移率族蛋白B1(HMGB1)是一种新型的SA结合蛋白。通过核磁共振(NMR)光谱研究在HMGB1的HMG盒结构域中鉴定出SA结合位点,并通过突变分析得到证实。细胞外HMGB1是一种与损伤相关的分子模式分子(DAMP),具有多种氧化还原状态。SA既能抑制完全还原的HMGB1的趋化活性,又能抑制由二硫键HMGB1诱导的促炎细胞因子基因和环氧化酶2(COX-2)的表达增加。鉴定出了对HMGB1具有更强抑制作用的天然和合成SA衍生物,这为开发针对无菌性炎症的高效新分子提供了概念验证。通过NMR化学位移扰动研究确定的一个SA结合位点发生突变的HMGB1蛋白保留了趋化活性,但失去了与SA及其衍生物的结合和抑制作用,从而有力地证明SA与HMGB1的结合直接抑制了其促炎活性。将HMGB1鉴定为SA/阿司匹林的药理学靶点,为这种世界上使用时间最长、应用最广泛的天然和合成药物之一的作用机制提供了新的见解。这也可能为低剂量阿司匹林使用的保护作用提供一种解释。