3.8 Article

Regulation of Syk activity by antiviral adaptor MAVS in FceRI signaling pathway

Journal

FRONTIERS IN ALLERGY
Volume 4, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/falgy.2023.1098474

Keywords

IgE; Fc epsilon RI; mast cells; RIG-I; MDA5; IRF3; antiviral signaling

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This study investigates the relationship between FceRI and RLR-mediated antiviral signaling pathways. Results show that mast cells without the adaptor molecule MAVS exhibit increased cytokine production despite normal degranulation. MAVS inhibits the key signaling molecule Syk kinase, while the deficiency of RIG-I, MDA5, or IRF3 leads to reduced or normal mast cell activation. MAVS-deficient mice show enhanced late-phase responses in passive cutaneous anaphylaxis.
Background: Mast cells are the major effector cell type for IgE-mediated allergic reactions. Recent studies revealed a role for mast cells in orchestrating the host response to viral infections.Objective: We studied the relationship between FceRI (high-affinity IgE receptor) and RIG-I-like receptor (RLR)-mediated antiviral signaling pathways.Methods: Mast cells (BMMCs) were cultured from bone marrow cells from mice deficient in MAVS or other RLR signaling molecules. MAVS expression was restored by retroviral transduction of MAVS-deficient BMMCs. These cells were stimulated with IgE and antigen and their activation (degranulation and cytokine production/secretion) was quantified. FceRI-mediated signaling events such as protein phosphorylation and Ca2+ flux were analyzed by western blotting and enzyme assays. WT and mutant mice as well as mast cell-deficient Kit(W-sh/W-sh) mice engrafted with BMMCs were subjected to passive cutaneous anaphylaxis.Results: Unexpectedly, we found that mast cells devoid of the adaptor molecule MAVS exhibit dramatically increased cytokine production upon FceRI stimulation, despite near-normal degranulation. Consistent with these observations, MAVS inhibited tyrosine phosphorylation, thus catalytic activity of Syk kinase, the key signaling molecule for FceRI-mediated mast cell activation. By contrast, mast cells deficient in RIG-I, MDA5 or IRF3, which are antiviral receptor and signaling molecules upstream or downstream of MAVS, exhibited reduced or normal mast cell activation. MAVS-deficient mice showed enhanced late-phase responses in passive cutaneous anaphylaxis.Conclusion: This study demonstrates that the adaptor MAVS in the RLR innate immune pathway uniquely intersects with the adaptive immune FceRI signaling pathway.

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