Citation

  • Authors: Gottar-Guillier, M., Dodeller, F., Huesken, D., Iourgenko, V., Mickanin, C., Labow, M., Gaveriaux, S., Kinzel, B., Mueller, M., Alitalo, K., Littlewood-Evans, A., Cenni, B.
  • Year: 2011
  • Journal: J Immunol 186 6014-23
  • Applications: in vitro / siRNA / jetPRIME
  • Cell type: HeLa
    Description: Human cervix epitheloid carcinoma cells

Method

20nM siRNA was complexed with 2µl of jetPRIME in a final volume of 50 µl of jetPRIME buffer. Results were analyzed 48h later.

Abstract

Inflammatory cytokines like TNF play a central role in autoimmune disorders such as rheumatoid arthritis. We identified the tyrosine kinase bone marrow kinase on chromosome X (BMX) as an essential component of a shared inflammatory signaling pathway. Transient depletion of BMX strongly reduced secretion of IL-8 in cell lines and primary human cells stimulated by TNF, IL-1beta, or TLR agonists. BMX was required for phosphorylation of p38 MAPK and JNK, as well as activation of NF-kappaB. The following epistasis analysis indicated that BMX acts downstream of or at the same level as the complex TGF-beta activated kinase 1 (TAK1)-TAK1 binding protein. At the cellular level, regulation of the IL-8 promoter required the pleckstrin homology domain of BMX, which could be replaced by an ectopic myristylation signal, indicating a requirement for BMX membrane association. In addition, activation of the IL-8 promoter by in vitro BMX overexpression required its catalytic activity. Genetic ablation of BMX conferred protection in the mouse arthritis model of passive K/BxN serum transfer, confirming that BMX is an essential mediator of inflammation in vivo. However, genetic replacement with a catalytically inactive BMX allele was not protective in the same arthritis animal model. We conclude that BMX is an essential component of inflammatory cytokine signaling and that catalytic, as well as noncatalytic functions of BMX are involved.

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