4.7 Article

TNFα shedding and epidermal inflammation are controlled by Jun proteins

Journal

GENES & DEVELOPMENT
Volume 23, Issue 22, Pages 2663-2674

Publisher

COLD SPRING HARBOR LAB PRESS, PUBLICATIONS DEPT
DOI: 10.1101/gad.543109

Keywords

Jun; AP-1; epidermis; TNF alpha; inflamation; TIMP-3

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Inducible epidermal deletion of JunB and c-Jun in adult mice causes a psoriasis-like inflammatory skin disease. Increased levels of the proinflammatory cytokine TNF alpha play a major role in this phenotype. Here we define the underlying molecular mechanism using genetic mouse models. We show that Jun proteins control TNF alpha shedding in the epidermis by direct transcriptional activation of tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinase- 3 (TIMP-3), an inhibitor of the TNF alpha-converting enzyme ( TACE). TIMP-3 is down- regulated and TACE activity is specifically increased, leading to massive, cell-autonomous TNF alpha shedding upon loss of both JunB and c-Jun. Consequently, a prominent TNF alpha-dependent cytokine cascade is initiated in the epidermis, inducing severe skin inflammation and perinatal death of newborns from exhaustion of energy reservoirs such as glycogen and lipids. Importantly, this metabolic cachectic'' phenotype can be genetically rescued in a TNFR1-deficient background or by epidermis-specific re-expression of TIMP-3. These findings reveal that Jun proteins are essential physiological regulators of TNF alpha shedding by controlling the TIMP-3/TACE pathway. This novel mechanism describing how Jun proteins control skin inflammation offers potential targets for the treatment of skin pathologies associated with increased TNF alpha levels.

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