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GLEPP1/Protein-tyrosine Phosphatase φ Inhibitors Block Chemotaxis in Vitro and in Vivo and Improve Murine Ulcerative ColitisS⃞

Authors :
Catherine Jorand-Lebrun
Vittoria Ardissone
Dominique Perrin
Chiara Ferrandi
Agnes Bombrun
Linfeng Chen
Corine Gillieron
Pierre Juillard
Margaret A. Shipp
Serge Halazy
Patrick Gerber
Fiona J. Pixley
Caroline Johnson-Leger
Christian Rommel
Rob Hooft van Huijsduijnen
Rosanna Pescini Gobert
Pierre-Alain Vitte
Cedric Szyndralewiez
Montserrat Camps
Dominique Swinnen
Monique van den Eijnden
Publication Year :
2009
Publisher :
American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, 2009.

Abstract

We describe novel, cell-permeable, and bioavailable salicylic acid derivatives that are potent and selective inhibitors of GLEPP1/protein-tyrosine phosphatase φ. Two previously described GLEPP1 substrates, paxillin and Syk, are both required for cytoskeletal rearrangement and cellular motility of leukocytes in chemotaxis. We show here that GLEPP1 inhibitors prevent dephosphorylation of Syk1 and paxillin in resting cells and block primary human monocyte and mouse bone marrow-derived macrophage chemotaxis in a gradient of monocyte chemotactic protein-1. In mice, the GLEPP1 inhibitors also reduce thioglycolate-induced peritoneal chemotaxis of neutrophils, lymphocytes, and macrophages. In murine disease models, the GLEPP1 inhibitors significantly reduce severity of contact hypersensitivity, a model for allergic dermatitis, and dextran sulfate sodium-induced ulcerative colitis, a model for inflammatory bowel disease. Taken together, our data provide confirmation that GLEPP1 plays an important role in controlling chemotaxis of multiple types of leukocytes and that pharmacological inhibition of this phosphatase may have therapeutic use.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1393fa2d5f75599b740ee084d01e4963