School of Clinical Sciences at Monash Health, Monash University, Melbourne, VIC, Australia.
Front Immunol. 2019 Jul 17;10:1684. doi: 10.3389/fimmu.2019.01684. eCollection 2019.
Glucocorticoids (GC) are used globally to treat autoimmune and inflammatory disorders. Their anti-inflammatory actions are mainly mediated via binding to the glucocorticoid receptor (GR), creating a GC/GR complex, which acts in both the cytoplasm and nucleus to regulate the transcription of a host of target genes. As a result, signaling pathways such as NF-κB and AP-1 are inhibited, and cell activation, differentiation and survival and cytokine and chemokine production are suppressed. However, the gene regulation by GC can also cause severe side effects in patients. Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE or lupus) is a multisystem autoimmune disease, characterized by a poorly regulated immune response leading to chronic inflammation and dysfunction of multiple organs, for which GC is the major current therapy. Long-term GC use, however, can cause debilitating adverse consequences for patients including diabetes, cardiovascular disease and osteoporosis and contributes to irreversible organ damage. To date, there is no alternative treatment which can replicate the rapid effects of GC across multiple immune cell functions, effecting disease control during disease flares. Research efforts have focused on finding alternatives to GC, which display similar immunoregulatory actions, without the devastating adverse metabolic effects. One potential candidate is the glucocorticoid-induced leucine zipper (GILZ). GILZ is induced by low concentrations of GC and is shown to mimic the action of GC in several inflammatory processes, reducing immunity and inflammation in and studies. Additionally, GILZ has, similar to the GC-GR complex, the ability to bind to both NF-κB and AP-1 as well as DNA directly, to regulate immune cell function, while potentially lacking the GC-related side effects. Importantly, in SLE patients GILZ is under-expressed and correlates negatively with disease activity, suggesting an important regulatory role of GILZ in SLE. Here we provide an overview of the actions and use of GC in lupus, and discuss whether the regulatory mechanisms of GILZ could lead to the development of a novel therapeutic for lupus. Increased understanding of the mechanisms of action of GILZ, and its ability to regulate immune events leading to lupus disease activity has important clinical implications for the development of safer anti-inflammatory therapies.
糖皮质激素(GC)被广泛用于治疗自身免疫性和炎症性疾病。它们的抗炎作用主要通过与糖皮质激素受体(GR)结合来介导,形成 GC/GR 复合物,在细胞质和细胞核中都能调节许多靶基因的转录。因此,NF-κB 和 AP-1 等信号通路被抑制,细胞的激活、分化和存活以及细胞因子和趋化因子的产生被抑制。然而,GC 的基因调节也会给患者带来严重的副作用。系统性红斑狼疮(SLE 或狼疮)是一种多系统自身免疫性疾病,其特征是免疫反应失调导致慢性炎症和多个器官功能障碍,GC 是目前的主要治疗方法。然而,长期使用 GC 会给患者带来衰弱性的不良反应,包括糖尿病、心血管疾病和骨质疏松症,并导致不可逆的器官损伤。迄今为止,还没有替代治疗方法可以复制 GC 在多种免疫细胞功能上的快速作用,在疾病发作时控制疾病。研究工作集中在寻找替代 GC 的方法,这些方法显示出相似的免疫调节作用,而没有破坏性的代谢不良影响。一个潜在的候选物是糖皮质激素诱导的亮氨酸拉链(GILZ)。GILZ 是由低浓度的 GC 诱导的,并在几种炎症过程中显示出模拟 GC 作用的能力,在 和 研究中减少了免疫和炎症。此外,GILZ 与 GC-GR 复合物一样,具有结合 NF-κB 和 AP-1 以及直接结合 DNA 的能力,以调节免疫细胞功能,同时可能缺乏 GC 相关的副作用。重要的是,在 SLE 患者中,GILZ 的表达下调,并与疾病活动呈负相关,这表明 GILZ 在 SLE 中具有重要的调节作用。在这里,我们提供了 GC 在狼疮中的作用和用途的概述,并讨论了 GILZ 的调节机制是否可能导致狼疮的新型治疗方法的发展。增加对 GILZ 作用机制及其调节导致狼疮疾病活动的免疫事件的理解,对开发更安全的抗炎治疗具有重要的临床意义。