Abstract
TLR3 recognizes dsRNAs and is considered of key importance to antiviral host-defense responses. TLR3 also triggers neuroprotective responses in astrocytes and controls the growth of axons and neuronal progenitor cells, suggesting additional roles for TLR3-mediated signaling in the CNS. This prompted us to search for alternative, CNS-borne protein agonists for TLR3. A genome-scale functional screening of a transcript library from brain tumors revealed that the microtubule regulator stathmin is an activator of TLR3-dependent signaling in astrocytes, inducing the same set of neuroprotective factors as the known TLR3 agonist polyinosinic:polycytidylic acid. This activity of stathmin crucially depends on a long, negatively charged α helix in the protein. Colocalization of stathmin with TLR3 on astrocytes, microglia, and neurons in multiple sclerosis-affected human brain indicates that as an endogenous TLR3 agonist, stathmin may fulfill previously unsuspected regulatory roles during inflammation and repair in the adult CNS.
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CITATION STYLE
Bsibsi, M., Bajramovic, J. J., Vogt, M. H. J., van Duijvenvoorden, E., Baghat, A., Persoon-Deen, C., … van Noort, J. M. (2010). The Microtubule Regulator Stathmin Is an Endogenous Protein Agonist for TLR3. The Journal of Immunology, 184(12), 6929–6937. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.0902419
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