4.6 Article

NOX2β: A Novel Splice Variant of NOX2 That Regulates NADPH Oxidase Activity in Macrophages

Journal

PLOS ONE
Volume 7, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0048326

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia [606472, 1006017, 545942, 570861, 606488, 1010984]
  2. Australian Research Council [FT120100876]
  3. National Heart Foundation of Australia [G 09M 4398, G 10M 5218]
  4. Cancer Council of Victoria [606674]
  5. Australian Research Council [FT120100876] Funding Source: Australian Research Council

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Nox2 oxidase is one isoform in a family of seven NADPH oxidases that generate reactive oxygen species (ROS) and thereby contribute to physiological and pathological processes including host defense, redox signaling and oxidative tissue damage. While alternative mRNA splicing has been shown to influence the activity of several Nox-family proteins, functionally relevant splice variants of Nox2 have not previously been identified. We immunoscreened several mouse tissues and cells for the presence of truncated Nox2 proteins and identified a 30 kDa protein in lung, spleen and macrophages. RTPCR analysis of mRNA from primary and immortalised (RAW264.7) mouse macrophages, and from human alveolar macrophages, identified a truncated Nox2 transcript which, upon sequence analysis, was found to be a product of the 'exon skipping' mode of alternative splicing, lacking exons 4-10 of the Nox2 gene. The predicted protein is comparable in size to that identified by immunoscreening and contains two transmembrane helices and an extended cytosolic C-terminus with binding sites for NADPH and the Nox organiser protein p47phox. Importantly, selective siRNA-mediated knockdown of the transcript reduced expression of the 30 kDa protein in macrophages, and suppressed phorbol ester-stimulated ROS production by 50%. We thus provide the first evidence that Nox2 undergoes alternative mRNA splicing to yield a 30 kDa protein - herein termed Nox2 beta - that regulates NADPH oxidase activity in macrophages from mice and humans. The discovery of Nox2 beta paves the way for future examination of its role in physiological and pathological processes.

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