Signal transduction controls heterogeneous NF- κ B dynamics and target gene expression through cytokine-specific refractory states

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Abstract

Cells respond dynamically to pulsatile cytokine stimulation. Here we report that single, or well-spaced pulses of TNFα (>100 min apart) give a high probability of NF- κ B activation. However, fewer cells respond to shorter pulse intervals (<100 min) suggesting a heterogeneous refractory state. This refractory state is established in the signal transduction network downstream of TNFR and upstream of IKK, and depends on the level of the NF-κ B system negative feedback protein A20. If a second pulse within the refractory phase is IL-1β instead of TNFα, all of the cells respond. This suggests a mechanism by which two cytokines can synergistically activate an inflammatory response. Gene expression analyses show strong correlation between the cellular dynamic response and NF-κ B-dependent target gene activation. These data suggest that refractory states in the NF-κ B system constitute an inherent design motif of the inflammatory response and we suggest that this may avoid harmful homogenous cellular activation.

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Adamson, A., Boddington, C., Downton, P., Rowe, W., Bagnall, J., Lam, C., … Paszek, P. (2016). Signal transduction controls heterogeneous NF- κ B dynamics and target gene expression through cytokine-specific refractory states. Nature Communications, 7. https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms12057

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