학술논문

Gene expression profiling following NRF2 and KEAP1 siRNA knockdown in human lung fibroblasts identifies CCL11/Eotaxin-1 as a novel NRF2 regulated gene
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
Respiratory Research. October 12, 2012, Vol. 13 Issue 1
Subject
Physiological aspects
Development and progression
Xenobiotics -- Physiological aspects
DNA microarrays -- Physiological aspects
Heme -- Physiological aspects
Genes -- Physiological aspects
Asthma -- Development and progression -- Physiological aspects
Gene expression -- Physiological aspects
Language
English
ISSN
1465-9921
Abstract
Author(s): Jimmy Fourtounis[sup.1] , I-Ming Wang[sup.2] , Marie-Claude Mathieu[sup.1] , David Claveau[sup.1] , Tenneille Loo[sup.1] , Aimee L Jackson[sup.2] , Mette A Peters[sup.2] , Alex G Therien[sup.3] , Yves Boie[sup.1] [...]
Background Oxidative Stress contributes to the pathogenesis of many diseases. The NRF2/KEAP1 axis is a key transcriptional regulator of the anti-oxidant response in cells. Nrf2 knockout mice have implicated this pathway in regulating inflammatory airway diseases such as asthma and COPD. To better understand the role the NRF2 pathway has on respiratory disease we have taken a novel approach to define NRF2 dependent gene expression in a relevant lung system. Methods Normal human lung fibroblasts were transfected with siRNA specific for NRF2 or KEAP1. Gene expression changes were measured at 30 and 48 hours using a custom Affymetrix Gene array. Changes in Eotaxin-1 gene expression and protein secretion were further measured under various inflammatory conditions with siRNAs and pharmacological tools. Results An anti-correlated gene set (inversely regulated by NRF2 and KEAP1 RNAi) that reflects specific NRF2 regulated genes was identified. Gene annotations show that NRF2-mediated oxidative stress response is the most significantly regulated pathway, followed by heme metabolism, metabolism of xenobiotics by Cytochrome P450 and O-glycan biosynthesis. Unexpectedly the key eosinophil chemokine Eotaxin-1/CCL11 was found to be up-regulated when NRF2 was inhibited and down-regulated when KEAP1 was inhibited. This transcriptional regulation leads to modulation of Eotaxin-1 secretion from human lung fibroblasts under basal and inflammatory conditions, and is specific to Eotaxin-1 as NRF2 or KEAP1 knockdown had no effect on the secretion of a set of other chemokines and cytokines. Furthermore, the known NRF2 small molecule activators CDDO and Sulphoraphane can also dose dependently inhibit Eotaxin-1 release from human lung fibroblasts. Conclusions These data uncover a previously unknown role for NRF2 in regulating Eotaxin-1 expression and further the mechanistic understanding of this pathway in modulating inflammatory lung disease. Keywords: Asthma, NRF2, KEAP1, Oxidative stress, Eotaxin regulation, Microarray profiling