Negative feed-forward control of tumor necrosis factor (TNF) by tristetraprolin (ZFP36) is limited by the mitogenactivated protein kinase phosphatase, dual-specificity phosphatase 1 (DUSP1): Implications for regulation by glucocorticoids

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Abstract

TNF is central to inflammation and may play a role in the pathogenesis of asthma. The 3'-untranslated region of the TNF transcript contains AU-rich elements (AREs) that are targeted by the RNA-binding protein, tristetraprolin (also known as zinc finger protein 36 (ZFP36)), which is itself up-regulated by inflammatory stimuli, to promote mRNA degradation. Using primary human bronchial epithelial and pulmonary epithelial A549 cells, we confirm that interleukin-1β (IL1B) induces expression of dual-specificity phosphatase 1 (DUSP1), ZFP36, and TNF. Whereas IL1B-induced DUSP1 is involved in feedback control of MAPK pathways, ZFP36 exerts negative (incoherent) feed-forward control ofTNFmRNAand protein expression. DUSP1 silencing increased IL1B-induced ZFP36 expression at 2 h and profoundly repressed TNF mRNA at 6 h. This was partly due to increased TNF mRNA degradation, an effect that was reduced by ZFP36 silencing. This confirms a regulatory network, whereby DUSP1-dependent negative feedback control reduces feed-forward control by ZFP36. Conversely, whereas DUSP1 overexpression and inhibition of MAPKs prevented IL1B-induced expression of ZFP36, this was associated with increased TNF mRNA expression at 6 h, an effect that was predominantly due to elevated transcription. This points to MAPK-dependent feed-forward control of TNF involving ZFP36-dependent and -independent mechanisms. In terms of repression by dexamethasone, neither silencing of DUSP1, silencing of ZFP36, nor silencing of both together prevented the repression of IL1B-induced TNF expression, thereby demonstrating the need for further repressive mechanisms by anti-inflammatory glucocorticoids. In summary, these data illustrate why understanding the competing effects of feedback and feedforward control is relevant to the development of novel antiinflammatory therapies.

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Shah, S., Mostafa, M. M., McWhae, A., Traves, S. L., & Newton, R. (2016). Negative feed-forward control of tumor necrosis factor (TNF) by tristetraprolin (ZFP36) is limited by the mitogenactivated protein kinase phosphatase, dual-specificity phosphatase 1 (DUSP1): Implications for regulation by glucocorticoids. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 291(1), 110–125. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M115.697599

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