Stimulus-selective crosstalk via the NF-κB signaling system reinforces innate immune response to alleviate gut infection

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Abstract

Tissue microenvironment functions as an important determinant of the inflammatory response elicited by the resident cells. Yet, the underlying molecular mechanisms remain obscure. Our systems-level analyses identified a duration code that instructs stimulus specific crosstalk between TLR4 activated canonical NF-κB pathway and lymphotoxin-β receptor (LTβR) induced non-canonical NF-κB signaling. Indeed, LTβR costimulation synergistically enhanced the late RelA/NF-κB response to TLR4 prolonging NF-κB target gene-expressions. Concomitant LTβR signal targeted TLR4-induced newly synthesized p100, encoded by Nfkb2, for processing into p52 that not only neutralized p100 mediated inhibitions, but potently generated RelA:p52/NF-κB activity in a positive feedback loop. Finally, Nfkb2 connected lymphotoxin signal within the intestinal niche in reinforcing epithelial innate inflammatory RelA/NF-κB response to Citrobacter rodentium infection, while Nfkb2-/- mice succumbed to gut infections owing to stromal defects. In sum, our results suggest that signal integration via the pleiotropic NF-κB system enables tissue microenvironment derived cues in calibrating physiological responses.

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APA

Banoth, B., Chatterjee, B., Vijayaragavan, B., Prasad, M. V. R., Roy, P., & Basak, S. (2015). Stimulus-selective crosstalk via the NF-κB signaling system reinforces innate immune response to alleviate gut infection. ELife, 2015(4), 1–56. https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.05648

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