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Annexin A2 binds to endosomes and negatively regulates TLR4-triggered inflammatory responses via the TRAM-TRIF pathway
被引:0
|作者:
Shuang Zhang
Min Yu
Qiang Guo
Rongpeng Li
Guobo Li
Shirui Tan
Xuefeng Li
Yuquan Wei
Min Wu
机构:
[1] University of North Dakota,Department of Basic Sciences
[2] State Key Laboratory of Biotherapy and Cancer Center/Collaborative Innovation Center of Biotherapy,Department of thoracic oncology
[3] West China Hospital,Department of Rheumatology
[4] Sichuan University,undefined
[5] West China Hospital,undefined
[6] Sichuan University,undefined
[7] Renji Hospital,undefined
[8] Shanghai Jiaotong University,undefined
[9] College of Biotechnology and Pharmaceutical Engineering,undefined
[10] Nanjing University of Technology,undefined
[11] Laboratory of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology,undefined
[12] School of Life Sciences,undefined
[13] Yunnan University,undefined
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摘要:
Lipopolysaccharide (LPS) derived from Gram-negative bacteria activates plasma membrane signaling via Toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4) on host cells and triggers innate inflammatory responses, but the underlying mechanisms remain to be fully elucidated. Here we reveal a role for annexin A2 (AnxA2) in host defense against infection as anxa2−/− mice were highly susceptible to Gram-negative bacteria-induced sepsis with enhanced inflammatory responses. Computing analysis and biochemical experiments identified that constitutive AnxA2 expression facilitated TLR4 internalization and its subsequent translocation into early endosomal membranes. It activated the TRAM-dependent endosomal signaling, leading to the release of anti-inflammatory cytokines. Importantly, AnxA2 deficiency prolonged TLR4-mediated signaling from the plasma membrane, which was attributable to pro-inflammatory cytokine production (IL-6, TNFα and IL-1β). Thus, AnxA2 directly exerted negative regulation of inflammatory responses through TLR4-initiated TRAM-TRIF pathway occurring on endosomes. This study reveals AnxA2 as a critical regulator in infection-initiated inflammation, which protects the host from excessive inflammatory damage.
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