Measurement of NF-κB activation in TLR-activated macrophages

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Abstract

Nuclear factor kappa-B (NF-κB) is a key transcription factor in the regulation of the innate immune inflammatory response in activated macrophages. NF-κB functions as a homo- or hetero-dimer derived from one or more of the five members of the NF-κB family, and is activated through a well-studied process of stimulus-dependent inhibitor degradation, post-translational modification, nuclear translocation, and chromatin binding. Its activity is subject to multiple levels of feedback control through both inhibitor protein activity and direct regulation of NF-κB components. Many methods have been developed to measure and quantify NF-κB activation. In this chapter, we summarize available methods and present a protocol for image-based measurement of NF-κB activation in macrophages activated with microbial stimuli. Using either a stably expressed GFP-tagged fusion of the RelA NF-κB protein, or direct detection of endogenous RelA by immunocytochemistry, we describe data collection and analysis to quantify NF-κB cytosol to nuclear translocation in single cells using fluorescence microscopy.

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Ernst, O., Vayttaden, S. J., & Fraser, I. D. C. (2018). Measurement of NF-κB activation in TLR-activated macrophages. In Methods in Molecular Biology (Vol. 1714, pp. 67–78). Humana Press Inc. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4939-7519-8_5

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