Jensen L E, Whitehead A S
Department of Pharmacology, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, 153 Johnson Pavilion, 3620 Hamilton Walk, Philadelphia, PA 19104-6084, USA.
Biochem J. 1998 Sep 15;334 ( Pt 3)(Pt 3):489-503. doi: 10.1042/bj3340489.
The acute-phase (AP) serum amyloid A proteins (A-SAA) are multifunctional apolipoproteins which are involved in cholesterol transport and metabolism, and in modulating numerous immunological responses during inflammation and the AP response to infection, trauma or stress. During the AP response the hepatic biosynthesis of A-SAA is up-regulated by pro-inflammatory cytokines, and circulating concentrations can increase by up to 1000-fold. Chronically elevated A-SAA concentrations are a prerequisite for the pathogenesis of secondary amyloidosis, a progressive and fatal disease characterized by the deposition in major organs of insoluble plaques composed principally of proteolytically cleaved A-SAA, and may also contribute to physiological processes that lead to atherosclerosis. There is therefore a requirement for both positive and negative control mechanisms that permit the rapid induction of A-SAA expression until it has fulfilled its host-protective function(s) and subsequently ensure that its expression can be rapidly returned to baseline. These mechanisms include modulation of promoter activity involving, for example, the inducer nuclear factor kappaB (NF-kappaB) and its inhibitor IkappaB, up-regulatory transcription factors of the nuclear factor for interleukin-6 (NF-IL6) family and transcriptional repressors such as yin and yang 1 (YY1). Post-transcriptional modulation involving changes in mRNA stability and translation efficiency permit further up- and down-regulatory control of A-SAA protein synthesis to be achieved. In the later stages of the AP response, A-SAA expression is effectively down-regulated via the increased production of cytokine antagonists such as the interleukin-1 receptor antagonist (IL-1Ra) and of soluble cytokine receptors, resulting in less signal transduction driven by pro-inflammatory cytokines.
急性期(AP)血清淀粉样蛋白A(A-SAA)是多功能载脂蛋白,参与胆固醇转运和代谢,并在炎症以及对感染、创伤或应激的急性期反应中调节多种免疫反应。在急性期反应期间,促炎细胞因子会上调肝脏中A-SAA的生物合成,循环浓度可增加高达1000倍。A-SAA浓度长期升高是继发性淀粉样变性发病机制的一个先决条件,继发性淀粉样变性是一种进行性致命疾病,其特征是主要由蛋白水解裂解的A-SAA组成的不溶性斑块沉积在主要器官中,并且还可能促成导致动脉粥样硬化的生理过程。因此,需要正负调控机制,以便在A-SAA发挥宿主保护功能之前允许其快速诱导表达,随后确保其表达能迅速恢复到基线水平。这些机制包括启动子活性的调节,例如涉及诱导剂核因子κB(NF-κB)及其抑制剂IκB、白细胞介素-6核因子(NF-IL6)家族的上调转录因子以及诸如阴阳1(YY1)等转录抑制因子。涉及mRNA稳定性和翻译效率变化的转录后调节可进一步实现对A-SAA蛋白质合成的上调和下调控制。在急性期反应的后期阶段,通过增加细胞因子拮抗剂(如白细胞介素-1受体拮抗剂(IL-1Ra))和可溶性细胞因子受体的产生,A-SAA表达被有效下调,导致促炎细胞因子驱动的信号转导减少。