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Role of NF-B in the Regulation of Immunity and Apoptosis Kavitha Bharatham Abstract • • • • • • • Introduction Structural Description Role as regulator of Immune responses Role as regulator of apoptosis Regulation Mechanism As target for Therapy Conclusions Introduction Nuclear Factor kappa B (NF- B) • Multifunctional transcription factor • Play central role in the cellular response to a variety of stress signal by regulating genes • Exists as homo or hetero-dimers found inactive in the cytoplasm • Upon stimulation, active NF-B rapidly translocates to the nucleus where it binds B-sites and activates target genes Role of NF- B/Rel family • Involved in proinflammatory response: a first line of defense against infectious diseases and cellular stress – Signal Activated NF- B immune defence activated – Immune response, inflammatory response, accute phase response • NF-B also a major anti-apoptopic factor – aberrant activation of NF- B causes Inflammatory diseases, Rheumatoid arthritis, Asthma, Atherosclerosis, Alzheimer – helps keeping cancer cells alive • NF-B also promoting growth – Activated NF- B cyclin D expression enhanced growth Factors that induce NF-kB Reactive Oxygen Species (ROS) Leukemia 16:1053-1068, 2002 Genes Regulated by NF-kB Nat.Rev.Cancer 2:301-310, 2002 Disorders associated with aberrant NF-B activation • • • • • • • • Rheumatoid arthritis Atherosclerosis Vascular dysfunction Multiple sclerosis Neurodegenerative disorders Inflammatory bowel disease H. pylori-associated gastritis Systemic inflammatory response syndrome • And the list is growing… • Autoimmune thyroid disease • Cystic fibrosis • Diabetes • Aging • Macular degeneration • HIV/AIDS • Cancer • Septic shock Structural Description The NF- B/Rel family NF-B belongs to the Rel family, which contains five mammalian Rel/NF- B proteins: 1. 2. 3. 1. 2. Potent transactivators synthesized in their mature form RelA (p65) c-Rel RelB Synthesized as precursors that are post translationally processed with no transactivation properties NF- B1 (p105 undergoes proteolytic maturation to p50) NF- B2 (p100 undergoes proteolytic maturation to p52) RelB forms dimer only with p50/p52 Most Common form: p50/p65 (NF-B1/RelA) NF- B proteins structure - TAD NH2 Rel homology domain GGG C-terminal IkB-like domains p105 p50 Ankyrin Repeats p100 +TAD p52 RelA(p65) cRel RelB TransActivation domains (TAD) Structural Details • Rel Homology Domain (RHD): 300aa conserved domain of Rel family which contains NLS (Nuclear localisation sequence) with several functions – DNA-binding (N-terminal half) – Dimerization (C-terminal half) – IB-interaction (C-terminal half) • IB (Inhibitor of Nf- B) blocks NLS and abolish translocation to nucleus – – – – IB family includes IB-, IB-, IB- and IB-, Bcl-3, etc., They posess ankyrin-repeats which are necessary for RHD-interaction impedes DNA-binding Upon Signal undergoes dissociation and degradation Dimerization p50 Dimer formation is necessary for DNA-binding Each subunit interacts with one half site B-sites are symmetric: 5´-GGGRNNYYCC-3 Structure: NFkB (p50-p65) + DNA Side view b –--5´-GGGRNNYYCC-3´-–- 3´-CCCYNNRRGG-5´-- Role as Regulator of Immune responses Role in inflammation Inflammation is a process by which the body attempts to dilute, destroy, or isolate a noxious (harmful) agent and repair damage TNF-alpha Transcription TNF Il-1 Up regulation of adhesion molecules (ICAM-1, VCAM-1) Cytokines that further enhance the immune response activators of inflammatory pathways (arachidonic acid met abolites, superoxides and nitric oxide) Role of IKK in Activating NF-B Pro-inflamatory cytokines, Pathogen associated molecular patterns (PAMPs), TNF Receptor (TNFR), Toll-like Receptor (TLR), Interleukin-1 receptor (IL-1R) Two types of inactive complexes in the cytoplasm Trimers = RHD-Homo-or heterodimers bound to an IBrepressor Heterodimers = Rel-protein + unprocessed RHD-precursor (p105, p110) Transcription NLS is exposed and translocated to Nucleus B site Two main signaling pathways Innate Adaptive NUCLEUS mRNA Target genes Transcription Innate vs Adaptive NF-kB activation pathway Canonical/Classical/Innate NF-B activation pathway Applies to RelA-p50 and c-Rel-p50 Retained in cytoplasm by IB NonCanonical/NonClassical/Adaptive NF-B activation pathway Affects NF-B2, which preferentially dimerizes with RELB Triggered by microbial and viral infections and exposure to proinfl ammatory cytokines Triggered by members of the tumornecrosis factor (TNF) cytokine family Depends mainly on the IKK sub unit of the IKK complex. Depends selectively on activation of the IKK subunit + another kinase NIK. Induce the phosphorylation-depen dent proteolytic removal of the I B Induce the phosphorylation-dependent proteolytic removal of the IB-like C-terminal domain of NF-B2 Role as Regulator of Apoptosis Apoptosis is Programmed Cell Death Apoptosis is needed to destroy cells that represent a threat to the integrity of the organism Inducers: • Damage-related inducers – heat shock, viral infection, bacterial toxins, oncogenes (myc, rel, E1A), tumor suppressors (p53), cytolytic T cells, oxidants • Therapy-associated agents – Chemotherapeutic drugs (e.g., cispatin, nitrogen mustard) – Antracyclines (doxorubicin), gamma radiation, UV radiation • Toxins – Ethanol, -amyloid peptide Diseases Associated with Deregulated Apoptosis Increased Apoptosis AIDS Neurodegernative disorders Alzeheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s disease, Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis Retinitis pigmentosa Myelodysplastic syndromes Aplastic anaemia Ischaemic Injury Myocardial infarction, Stroke, Reperfusion injury Toxin-Induced liver disease Alcohol Inhibition of Apoptosis Cancer Follicular lymphomas carinomas with p53 mutations hormone dependent tumours: breast cancer, prostate cancer, ovarian cancer Autoimmune Disorders Systemic lupus erythematosus Immune-mediated glomerulonephritus Viral Infections Herpesvirus, poxvirus, adenovirus NF-B is an anti-apoptotic factor Via NF-B TNF blocks its own cell death potential Chemotherapy activates NF-B within tumor cells NF-B inhibitors augment chemotherapy Mechanism behind Anti-apoptotic activity RIP: Receptor interacting protein FADD: Fas associated Death domain IAP: Inhibitor of Apoptosis TRAF: TNFR associated protein Bid: Bcl-2 interacting domain JNK: Jun N-terminal kinase Cell Death Balance between life and death When NF-B is not inhibited ANTI-APOPTOTIC PROTEINS When NF-B is inhibited PRO-APOPTOTIC PROTEINS Regulation Mechanism Negative feedback: Attenuation of NF-B response • Negative loop: IB is under direct control of NF-B IB RelA ib IB p50 kB site • RIP and TRAF1 are cleaved Caspase 8 RIP TRAF1 Cleaved Therapeutic inhibition of NFB Conclusions • The NF-B is an important pathway in regulating the stress response in the body • It plays a key role in oncogenesis • Work continues on manipulating the pathway for use in therapy • Complete elucidation of the mechanisms involved in regulation of NF-B activation is required to generate inhibitors • Therapeutic inhibitors that selectively block NF-B activation in cancer cells without effecting normal functions are required References • • • • • Seminars in Cancer Biology 13 (2003) 107–114 TRENDS in Immunology Vol.25 No.6 June 2004 Clinical Chemistry 45:1 7–17 (1999) The Journal of Clinical Investigation January 2001 Volume 107 Number 2 Human Molecular Genetics, 2002, Vol. 11, No. 20