Lalani Almin I, Luo Chang, Han Yeming, Xie Ping
Department of Cell Biology and Neuroscience, Rutgers University, Piscataway, New Jersey 08854, USA ; Graduate Program in Cellular and Molecular Pharmacology, Rutgers University, Piscataway, New Jersey 08854, USA.
Department of Cell Biology and Neuroscience, Rutgers University, Piscataway, New Jersey 08854, USA.
Macrophage (Houst). 2015 Sep 30;2:e1009. doi: 10.14800/macrophage.1009.
Tumor necrosis factor receptor-associated factor 3 (TRAF3), a member of the TRAF family of cytoplasmic adaptor proteins with E3 ligase activity, is ubiquitously expressed in various cell types of the immune system. It is shared for signaling by a variety of adaptive and innate immune receptors as well as cytokine receptors. Previous studies examining conditional TRAF3-deficient mouse models that have the gene specifically deleted in B lymphocytes or T lymphocytes have revealed the diverse and critical functions of TRAF3 in adaptive immunity. Although evidence points to a pivotal and indispensable role for TRAF3 in type I interferon production induced by pattern recognition receptors in macrophages and dendritic cells, the functions of TRAF3 in the innate immune system had long remained unclear. Three laboratories have recently addressed this gap in knowledge by investigating myeloid cell-specific TRAF3-deficient (genotype: TRAF3LysM) mice. The new evidence together demonstrates that specific ablation of TRAF3 in myeloid cells leads to inflammatory diseases, altered progression of diabetes, and spontaneous development of different types of tumors and infections in mice. These new findings indicate that TRAF3 acts as an anti-inflammatory factor and is required for optimal innate immunity in myeloid cells. Strikingly, the new evidence also identifies TRAF3 as a novel tumor suppressor gene in macrophages and other myeloid cells. In this review, we discuss and summarize the new findings and current knowledge about the multi-faceted regulatory roles and complex signaling mechanisms of myeloid cell TRAF3 in inflammation, innate immunity, and tumor development.
肿瘤坏死因子受体相关因子3(TRAF3)是具有E3连接酶活性的细胞质衔接蛋白TRAF家族的成员,在免疫系统的各种细胞类型中普遍表达。它被多种适应性和先天性免疫受体以及细胞因子受体用于信号传导。先前对在B淋巴细胞或T淋巴细胞中特异性缺失该基因的条件性TRAF3缺陷小鼠模型的研究揭示了TRAF3在适应性免疫中的多种关键功能。尽管有证据表明TRAF3在巨噬细胞和树突状细胞中由模式识别受体诱导的I型干扰素产生中起关键和不可或缺的作用,但TRAF3在先天性免疫系统中的功能长期以来一直不清楚。最近,三个实验室通过研究髓样细胞特异性TRAF3缺陷(基因型:TRAF3LysM)小鼠填补了这一知识空白。新证据共同表明,髓样细胞中TRAF3的特异性缺失会导致炎症性疾病、糖尿病进展改变以及小鼠中不同类型肿瘤和感染的自发发展。这些新发现表明TRAF3作为一种抗炎因子,是髓样细胞中最佳先天性免疫所必需的。引人注目的是,新证据还将TRAF3确定为巨噬细胞和其他髓样细胞中的一种新型肿瘤抑制基因。在这篇综述中,我们讨论并总结了关于髓样细胞TRAF3在炎症、先天性免疫和肿瘤发展中的多方面调节作用和复杂信号机制的新发现和现有知识。