The cell death receptor Fas plays a role in the establishment of fulminant hepatitis, a major cause of drug-induced liver failure. Fas activation elicits extrinsic apoptotic and hepatoprotective signals; however, the mechanisms by which these signals are integrated during disease are unknown. Tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinases 3 (TIMP3) controls the critical sheddase a disintegrin and metalloproteinase 17 (ADAM17) and may dictate stress signaling. Using mice and cells lacking TIMP3, ADAM17, and ADAM17-regulated cell surface molecules, we have found that ADAM17-mediated ectodomain shedding of TNF receptors and EGF family ligands controls activation of multiple signaling cascades in Fas-induced hepatitis. We demonstrated that TNF signaling promoted hepatotoxicity, while excessive TNF receptor 1 (TNFR1) shedding in Timp3-/- mice was protective. Compound Timp3-/-Tnf-/- and Timp3-/-Tnfr1-/- knockout conferred complete resistance to Fas-induced toxicity. Loss of Timp3 enhanced metalloproteinase-dependent EGFR signaling due to increased release of the EGFR ligands TGF-alpha, amphiregulin, and HB-EGF, while depletion of shed amphiregulin resensitized Timp3-/- hepatocytes to apoptosis. Finally, adenoviral delivery of Adam17 prevented acetaminophen-induced liver failure in a clinically relevant model of Fas-dependent fulminant hepatitis. These findings demonstrate that TIMP3 and ADAM17 cooperatively dictate cytokine signaling during death receptor activation and indicate that regulated metalloproteinase activity integrates survival and death signals during acute hepatotoxic stress.

Murthy, A., Defamie, V., Smookler, D., Di Grappa, M., Horiuchi, K., Federici, M., et al. (2010). Ectodomain shedding of EGFR ligands and TNFR1 dictates hepatocyte apoptosis during fulminant hepatitis in mice. THE JOURNAL OF CLINICAL INVESTIGATION, 120(8), 2731-2744 [10.1172/JCI42686].

Ectodomain shedding of EGFR ligands and TNFR1 dictates hepatocyte apoptosis during fulminant hepatitis in mice

FEDERICI, MASSIMO;
2010-08-02

Abstract

The cell death receptor Fas plays a role in the establishment of fulminant hepatitis, a major cause of drug-induced liver failure. Fas activation elicits extrinsic apoptotic and hepatoprotective signals; however, the mechanisms by which these signals are integrated during disease are unknown. Tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinases 3 (TIMP3) controls the critical sheddase a disintegrin and metalloproteinase 17 (ADAM17) and may dictate stress signaling. Using mice and cells lacking TIMP3, ADAM17, and ADAM17-regulated cell surface molecules, we have found that ADAM17-mediated ectodomain shedding of TNF receptors and EGF family ligands controls activation of multiple signaling cascades in Fas-induced hepatitis. We demonstrated that TNF signaling promoted hepatotoxicity, while excessive TNF receptor 1 (TNFR1) shedding in Timp3-/- mice was protective. Compound Timp3-/-Tnf-/- and Timp3-/-Tnfr1-/- knockout conferred complete resistance to Fas-induced toxicity. Loss of Timp3 enhanced metalloproteinase-dependent EGFR signaling due to increased release of the EGFR ligands TGF-alpha, amphiregulin, and HB-EGF, while depletion of shed amphiregulin resensitized Timp3-/- hepatocytes to apoptosis. Finally, adenoviral delivery of Adam17 prevented acetaminophen-induced liver failure in a clinically relevant model of Fas-dependent fulminant hepatitis. These findings demonstrate that TIMP3 and ADAM17 cooperatively dictate cytokine signaling during death receptor activation and indicate that regulated metalloproteinase activity integrates survival and death signals during acute hepatotoxic stress.
2-ago-2010
Pubblicato
Rilevanza internazionale
Articolo
Sì, ma tipo non specificato
Settore MED/09 - MEDICINA INTERNA
Settore M-EDF/01 - METODI E DIDATTICHE DELLE ATTIVITA' MOTORIE
English
Con Impact Factor ISI
Male; protein structure, tertiary; cells, cultured; extracellular signal-regulated map kinases; hepatocytes; jnk mitogen-activated protein kinases; animals; drug-induced liver injury; apoptosis; receptor, epidermal growth factor; receptors, tumor necrosis factor, type i; signal transduction; mice; tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinase-3; phosphorylation; antigens, cd95; cytoprotection; mice, inbred c57bl; adam proteins; proto-oncogene proteins c-akt; nf-kappa b; liver failure, acute
Murthy, A., Defamie, V., Smookler, D., Di Grappa, M., Horiuchi, K., Federici, M., et al. (2010). Ectodomain shedding of EGFR ligands and TNFR1 dictates hepatocyte apoptosis during fulminant hepatitis in mice. THE JOURNAL OF CLINICAL INVESTIGATION, 120(8), 2731-2744 [10.1172/JCI42686].
Murthy, A; Defamie, V; Smookler, D; Di Grappa, M; Horiuchi, K; Federici, M; Sibilia, M; Blobel, C; Khokha, R
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2108/23441
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