Regulation of Eotaxin Gene Expression by TNF-α and IL-4 Through mRNA Stabilization: Involvement of the RNA-Binding Protein HuR
Author(s) -
Ulus Atasoy,
Stephanie Curry,
Isabel López de Silanes,
AnnBin Shyu,
Vincenzo Casolaro,
Myriam Gorospe,
Cristiana Stellato
Publication year - 2003
Publication title -
the journal of immunology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.737
H-Index - 372
eISSN - 1550-6606
pISSN - 0022-1767
DOI - 10.4049/jimmunol.171.8.4369
Subject(s) - messenger rna , eotaxin , microbiology and biotechnology , transfection , rna binding protein , gene expression , untranslated region , biology , reporter gene , post transcriptional regulation , chemokine , chemistry , gene , immunology , inflammation , biochemistry
During inflammatory responses, a major posttranscriptional regulation of early response and inflammatory gene expression occurs through modulation of mRNA turnover. We report that two potent inducers of the CC chemokine eotaxin, TNF-alpha and IL-4, regulate its production in airway epithelial cells by increasing eotaxin mRNA stability. In experiments using the transcriptional inhibitor actinomycin D, eotaxin mRNA half-life was significantly prolonged by cell stimulation with TNF-alpha or IL-4, with the combination of the two cytokines being the most effective in extending the mRNA half-life. Involvement of the eotaxin 3' untranslated region in the mRNA-stabilizing effect was tested by transient transfection of a construct expressing a chimeric transcript carrying a serum-inducible beta-globin reporter linked to the eotaxin 3' untranslated region. The half-life of the chimeric mRNA was markedly increased in cells stimulated with TNF-alpha and IL-4. Evidence that the mRNA-stabilizing protein HuR participated in the cytokine effect was obtained: first, HuR presence in the cytoplasm, believed to be required for HuR-mediated mRNA stabilization, increased in both transformed (BEAS-2B cell line) and primary bronchial epithelial cells following treatment with TNF-alpha and IL-4. Second, endogenous eotaxin mRNA was found to bind to HuR in vivo, as detected by immunoprecipitation of HuR-containing messenger ribonucleoprotein complexes followed by real-time RT-PCR analysis; such association increased after cell treatment with TNF-alpha and IL-4. Third, overexpression of HuR in BEAS-2B cells significantly increased the expression of eotaxin mRNA and protein. Our findings implicate mRNA stabilization in the cytokine-mediated increase in eotaxin expression and strongly suggest a role for HuR in this effect.
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