4.8 Article

Reciprocal CD40 signals through p38MAPK and ERK-1/2 induce counteracting immune responses

Journal

NATURE MEDICINE
Volume 10, Issue 5, Pages 540-544

Publisher

NATURE RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1038/nm1045

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Macrophages play host to Leishmania major, a parasite that causes leishmaniasis in 500,000 people annually. Macrophage-expressed CD40, a costimulatory molecule 1, induces interleukin-12 (IL-12)-dependent and interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma)-dependent host-protective immune responses to Leishmania and other intracellular pathogens(2-6). Paradoxically, IL-10, another CD40-induced cytokine in macrophages(7), promotes Leishmania infection(8). How CD40 signaling regulates the secretion of these two counteractive cytokines remains unknown. Here we show that weak CD40 signals induce extracellular stress-related kinase-1/2 (ERK-1/ 2)-dependent IL-10 expression, whereas stronger signals induce p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase (p38MAPK) dependent IL-12 production. p38MAPK and ERK-1/ 2 therefore have counter-regulatory actions. Leishmania skews CD40 signaling toward ERK-1/ 2, inducing IL-10, which inhibits activation of CD40-induced p38MAPK and expression of inducible nitric oxide synthase-2 (iNOS-2) and IL-12. ERK-1/ 2 inhibition or IL-10 neutralization restores CD40-induced p38MAPK activation and parasite killing in macrophages and the BALB/c mouse, a susceptible host. These data uncover a new immune evasion strategy, whereby Leishmania differentially modulates CD40-engaged, reciprocally functioning signaling modules, and provide a new conceptual framework for immune homeostasis.

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