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Autocrine–paracrine prostaglandin E2 signaling restricts TLR4 internalization and TRIF signaling
发布时间:2019-01-10 浏览次数:695

The unique cell biology of Toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4) allows it to initiate two signal-transduction cascades: a signal dependent on the adaptors TIRAP (Mal) and MyD88 that begins at the cell surface and regulates proinflammatory cytokines, and a signal dependent on the adaptors TRAM and TRIF that begins in the endosomes and drives the production of type I interferons. Negative feedback circuits to limit TLR4 signals from both locations are necessary to balance the inflammatory response. We describe a negative feedback loop driven by autocrine–paracrine prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) and the PGE2 receptor EP4 that restricted TRIF-dependent signals and the induction of interferon-β through the regulation of TLR4 trafficking. Inhibition of PGE2 production or antagonism of EP4 increased the rate at which TLR4 translocated to endosomes and amplified TRIF-dependent activation of the transcription factor IRF3 and caspase-8. This PGE2-driven mechanism restricted TLR4–TRIF signaling in vitro after infection of macrophages by the Gram-negative pathogens Escherichia coli or Citrobacter rodentium and protected mice against mortality induced by Salmonella enteritidis serovar Typhimurium. Thus, PGE2 restricted TLR4–TRIF signaling specifically in response to lipopolysaccharide.

Nature Immunologyvolume 19pages13091318(2018)