4.5 Article

Mechanism of interleukin-1α transcriptional regulation of S100A9 in a human epidermal keratinocyte cell line

Journal

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.bbagrm.2013.03.010

Keywords

S100A9; IL-1 alpha; Keratinocytes; p38; C/EBP beta

Funding

  1. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science [19592388, 21592625, 24593125]
  2. NIH [R01DE11831, R01DE021206]
  3. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [19592388, 24593125, 23310093, 21592625] Funding Source: KAKEN

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S100A9 is a calcium-binding protein and subunit of antimicrobial calprotectin complex (S100A8/A9). Produced by neutrophils, monocytes/macrophages and keratinocytes, S100A9 expression increases in response to inflammation. For example, IL-1 alpha produced by epithelial cells acts autonomously on the same cells to induce the expression of S100A8/A9 and cellular differentiation. Whereas it is well known that IL-1 alpha and members of the IL-10 family of cytokines upregulate S100A8 and S100A9 in several cell lineages, the pathway and mechanism of IL-1 alpha-dependent transcriptional control of S100A9 in epithelial cells are not established. Modeled using human epidermal keratinocytes (HaCaT cells), IL-1 alpha stimulated the phosphorylation of p38 MAPK and induced S100A9 expression, which was blocked by IL-1 receptor antagonist, RNAi suppression of p38, or a p38 MAPK inhibitor. Transcription of S100A9 in HaCaT cells depended on nucleotides -94 to -53 in the upstream promoter region, based upon the use of deletion constructs and luciferase reporter activity. Within the responsive promoter region, IL-1 alpha increased the binding activity of CCAAT/enhancer binding protein beta (C/EBP beta). Mutated C/EBP beta binding sequences or C/EBP beta-specific siRNA inhibited the S100A9 transcriptional response. Hence, IL-1 alpha is strongly suggested to increase S100A9 expression in a human epidermal keratinocyte cell line by signaling through the IL-1 receptor and p38 MAPK, increasing C/EBP beta-dependent transcriptional activity. (c) 2013 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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