Gene interactions and pathways from curated databases and text-mining
J Immunol 2005, PMID: 15972680

Endotoxin tolerance disrupts chromatin remodeling and NF-kappaB transactivation at the IL-1beta promoter.

Chan, Christopher; Li, Liwu; McCall, Charles E; Yoza, Barbara K

The NF-kappaB family plays a crucial role in the pathogenesis of highly lethal septicemia by modulating transcription of many innate and adaptive immunity genes. Two phases of NF-kappaB activation occur: cytosolic activation and nuclear transactivation. Septicemia with multiorgan failure is associated with chronic activation of cytosolic NF-kappaB with translocation and accumulation of increased levels of nuclear p65 in blood leukocytes. Paradoxically, NF-kappaB-dependent transcription of many proinflammatory genes responding to bacterial LPS endotoxin (LPS) is persistently repressed during septicemia; this phenomenon of LPS tolerance is associated with immunosuppression and poor prognosis. This report suggests an explanation for this paradox. Using an in vitro human leukocyte model and chromatin immunoprecipitation assays, we find that both the cytosolic activation and nuclear transactivation phases of NF-kappaB occur in LPS responsive THP-1 promonocytes with recruitment and binding of NF-kappaB p65 at the IL-1beta promoter. However, transcriptionally repressed LPS-tolerant THP-1 cells do not bind NF-kappaB p65 at the IL-1beta promoter, despite cytosolic activation and accumulation of p65 in the nucleus. In contrast, NF-kappaB p50, which also accumulates in the nucleus, constitutively binds to the IL-1beta promoter NF-kappaB site in both LPS-responsive and LPS-tolerant cells. The level of p65 binding correlates with a binary shift in nucleosome remodeling between histone H3 phosphorylation at serine 10 and methylation of histone H3 at lysine 9. We conclude that LPS tolerance disrupts the transactivating stage of NF-kappaB p65 and altered nucleosome remodeling at the IL-1beta promoter in human leukocytes.

Diseases/Pathways annotated by Medline MESH: Sepsis
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Text Mining Data

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Manually curated Databases

  • IRef Innatedb Interaction: NFKB1 — IL1B (unknown, -)
In total, 1 gene pairs are associated to this article in curated databases