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Oxidation of the alarmin IL-33 regulates ST2-dependent inflammation

Authors :
Dorothy A. Sims
Richard D. May
Tomas Mustelin
Joanne Woods
David C. Lowe
Denice T. Y. Chan
Laura Rapley
Benjamin Kemp
Matthew A. Sleeman
Nicholas J. Bond
Christel Séguy Veyssier
Liz Flavell
Katherine A. Vousden
Tristan J. Vaughan
Sara Carmen
Kevin J. Embrey
Overed-Sayer Catherine L
Catherine E. Huntington
Christopher E. Brightling
Michael R. Snaith
Bojana Popovic
D. Gareth Rees
Strain Martin D
Ian C. Scott
E. Suzanne Cohen
Jianqing Xu
Dominic J. Corkill
Jayesh B. Majithiya
Daniel R. Higazi
Elizabeth England
Robin Butler
Source :
Nature Communications
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2015.

Abstract

In response to infections and irritants, the respiratory epithelium releases the alarmin interleukin (IL)-33 to elicit a rapid immune response. However, little is known about the regulation of IL-33 following its release. Here we report that the biological activity of IL-33 at its receptor ST2 is rapidly terminated in the extracellular environment by the formation of two disulphide bridges, resulting in an extensive conformational change that disrupts the ST2 binding site. Both reduced (active) and disulphide bonded (inactive) forms of IL-33 can be detected in lung lavage samples from mice challenged with Alternaria extract and in sputum from patients with moderate–severe asthma. We propose that this mechanism for the rapid inactivation of secreted IL-33 constitutes a ‘molecular clock' that limits the range and duration of ST2-dependent immunological responses to airway stimuli. Other IL-1 family members are also susceptible to cysteine oxidation changes that could regulate their activity and systemic exposure through a similar mechanism.<br />IL-33, released by epithelial cells in response to stress, is a potent activator of inflammation. Here Cohen et al. show that secreted IL-33 is rapidly inactivated by disulfide bond formation that prevents binding to its receptor, and that IL-33-related cytokines are susceptible to similar oxidation.

Details

ISSN :
20411723
Volume :
6
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Communications
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1b4e798ae4acbf3ca9908c1722c12fd8
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms9327