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Institute of Biochemistry (J.B.), University Hospital RWTH, D-52074 Aachen, Germany; Infectious Diseases Service (T.C.), Department of Medicine, Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Vandois, CH-1011 Lausanne, Switzerland; and Yale University School of Medicine (H.F., R.B.), New Haven, Connecticut 06520
Address all correspondence and requests for reprints to: Richard Bucala, Department of Medicine, Pathology, and Epidemiology and Public Health, Yale University School of Medicine, The Anlyan Center, S525, 300 Cedar Street, New Haven, Connecticut 06520-8031. E-mail: Richard.Bucala{at}Yale.edu.
| ABSTRACT |
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| INTRODUCTION |
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Glucocorticoids inhibit inflammation by affecting a broad range of signaling pathways, and they have diverse effects that extend beyond the immune system. These actions include dose-limiting side effects that are extensions of their immunosuppressive properties, such as impairment of wound repair, but also osteoporosis, hypertension, diabetes, obesity, and growth retardation in children. Glucocorticoids continue to form a keystone in the pharmacological armamentarium for the treatment of autoimmunity. Indeed, since the first successful use of cortisol (the principal glucocorticoid of the adrenal cortex) in 1948, some rheumatologists have divided the history of their clinical specialty into BC (before cortisol) and AC (after cortisol). According to community survey data, the prevalence of oral glucocorticoid use has been estimated at 0.5% of the general population and 1.4% of those older than 55 yr. Resistance to glucocorticoid therapy is also common and occurs in up to 30% of people suffering from arthritis, asthma, or inflammatory bowel disease. Negative side effects significantly limit the clinical efficacy of glucocorticoid treatment, and ultimately contraindicate high doses or prolonged use of glucocorticoids (2, 3, 4).
Emerging information about macrophage migration inhibitory factor (MIF) indicates that this protein is a unique regulatory mediator that has the ability to sustain inflammatory responses in the face of endogenous or exogenous glucocorticoids. This property makes MIF an attractive therapeutic target for autoimmune and inflammatory disease. Therapeutic antagonism of MIF could represent a true, physiological steroid-sparing therapy that would make possible a reduction or elimination of the requirement for glucocorticoids in patients with severe inflammatory or refractory autoimmune or disease. We review herein the actions of glucocorticoids and MIF within the immune system and discuss the functional interactions between the two mediators that are relevant to immunopathology.
| GLUCOCORTICOIDS AND HOST IMMUNITY |
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Dysregulation of these neuroendocrine pathways by hyperactivity or hypoactivity of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis significantly influences the host inflammatory and immunological response (6). This effect is well demonstrated by the outcome of experimental hypophysectomy or adrenalectomy, which dramatically amplifies inflammatory disease in experimental animal models and may convert a remitting disease course to one that is fulminant and lethal (7). In models of endotoxemia, surgical interruption of the HPA axis in rodents increases their sensitivity to lethal shock by 23 orders of magnitude (8). Clinically, hyperactivity of the HPA axis as in Cushings syndrome causes immunosuppression and increases susceptibility to infection (9). Hypoactivity is exemplified by patients with adrenal insufficiency (Addisons disease) who require supplemental glucocorticoids to prevent the toxic effects of high systemic levels of cytokines released in response to stress. Recent studies also have identified important, permissive roles for endogenous glucocortiocids in effecting both the magnitude of the innate response and the direction of ensuing adaptive immune responses. Glucocorticoids influence T cell polarization and differentiation and may influence the class of specific antibody produced and the strength of the memory T cell response (10, 11).
The mechanisms by which glucocorticoids act within the cell to inhibit inflammation proceed by several distinct transcriptional, posttranscriptional, and posttranslational pathways (1). Glucocorticoid receptor transcriptional activation has been well defined by molecular biological manipulation of different in vitro models of glucocorticoid action. The best studied mechanism for glucocorticoid action on the genome is by the interaction of the glucocorticoid receptor with sequence-conserved, glucocorticoid-responsive elements that are present in the promoter regions of diverse genes. Negative glucocorticoid-responsive elements or DNA motifs that bind the liganded glucocorticoid receptor and repress transcription also have been described. Homodimerization of the receptors DNA-binding domains previously had been considered essential for the induction of gene expression; however, it is now clear that dimerization is not essential for response element binding. Studies of dimerization mutants have shown that some activated genes are disrupted, whereas others are not, and some are even hyperactivated in the absence of ligand-induced dimer formation (12, 13). In general, glucocorticoids suppress the transcription of proinflammatory or immune response genes, although notable examples of gene induction include the lipocortins (annexins or phospholipase A2-inhibiting proteins) (14), the adhesion molecule CD163 (15), glucocorticoid-induced leucine zipper (16), which mediates thymocyte apoptosis, and under specialized circumstances, the growth factors TGFß (17), platelet-derived growth factor (18), and colony-stimulating factors (19, 20). Of note, studies of mice with function-selective mutations that abrogate glucocorticoid receptor interaction with DNA glucocorticoid-responsive elements suggests that protein-protein interactions between the glucocorticoid receptor and transcription factors such as nuclear factor-
B (NF-
B) appear to underlie most of the antiinflammatory properties of glucocorticoids (21).
Different and nonoverlapping mechanisms of glucocorticoid action account both for the efficacy of glucocorticoids in reducing inflammation and for their diverse effects on different cell and tissue types. A well studied example is illustrated by glucocorticoid suppression of inflammatory prostaglandin synthesis, as recently reviewed by Rhen and Cidlowski (1). At least three different and independent mechanisms of inhibition are involved in the suppression of this pathway. The first mechanism involves the transcriptional induction and activation of annexin I, an antiinflammatory protein that physically interacts with and inhibits cytosolic phospholipase A2
(cPLA2
), which is the enzyme responsible for hydrolyzing the eicosanoid precursor, arachidonic acid, from membrane phospholipids. Mice lacking annexin I show enhanced inflammatory responses, in part due to increased levels of cPLA2
and resistance to glucocorticoids (14). Many inflammatory signals leading to prostaglandin production proceed through the activation and phosphorylation of the MAPK cascade (22). The MAPKs comprise three general families: ERK1/2, which are generally growth regulatory but also exert important potentiating or sustaining effects on NF
B and other signaling pathways, the p38 kinases, which are more directly inflammatory and originally discovered as mediating TNF signals, and Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK), which may be activated by diverse, stress-related stimuli (23). Jun N-terminal kinase, in turn, phosphorylates the transcription factor c-Jun, which induces the transcription of numerous inflammatory and immune genes by binding activator protein 1 (AP-1) DNA sequences (24).
Glucocorticoids have the important action of up-regulating MAPK phosphatase I (MKP-1), which dephosphorylates and inactivates all members of the MAPK family of proteins (25, 26). MKP-1 thus inhibits cPLA2
activity by preventing its phosphorylation by MAPKs and MAPK-interacting kinase. The glucocorticoid receptor itself is also able to directly interfere with c-Jun-mediated transcription through protein-protein interactions between the glucocorticoid receptor and c-Jun homodimers (27).
A third mechanism by which glucocorticoids act is by protein-protein interaction with the pivotal transcriptional regulator, NF-
B (28). NF-
B is a master inflammatory regulator that is activated by diverse signals emanating from the activation of innate (Toll-like receptors), antigen (T cell/B cell), and cytokine receptor pathways (29). In its inactive state, NF-
B is sequestered in the cytoplasm by its inhibitory binding factor, I
B
. Inflammatory signals such as microbial pathogen-associated molecular patterns, specific antigen in B and T cells, and certain cytokines initiate signaling cascades that activate I
B kinases. Phosphorylation of I
B
leads to its ubiquination and degradation by the proteasome, uncovering a nuclear localization sequence on NF-
B. Once in the nucleus, NF-
B binds to promoter NF-
B response elements to up-regulate the transcription of genes for a large number of cytokines, cell-adhesion molecules, complement factors, and receptors for these molecules. NF-
B also up-regulates genes necessary for inflammatory eicosanoid production, including cyclooxygenase 2. Glucocorticoids antagonize prostaglandin synthesis by direct interaction between the glucocorticoid receptor and the transcriptional activator NF-
B and possibly by up-regulating the expression of antiinflammatory I
B
(30, 31). Thus, glucocorticoid-induced antagonism of NF-
B is the third mechanism for the inhibition of prostaglandin synthesis after the induction of the antagonists of cPLA2
, annexin 1 and MAPK phosphatase 1. As illustrated by this example of inflammatory prostaglandin synthesis, glucocorticoids act at multiple levels within the cellular activation response to exert control over inflammation.
The expression of many proinflammatory cytokines such as TNF, IL-1, and IL-6 are repressed by glucocortiocoids at the level of gene transcription by mechanisms that involve inhibition of AP-1 and NF-
B activities. Glucocorticoids also decrease mRNA stability, which is a significant level of regulatory control for rapid and strongly induced genes, such as cyclooxygenase 2, TNF, IL-1, vascular endothelial growth factor, and others (26, 32, 33). In particular instances, these turnover effects have been defined to involve regulatory sequences in the mRNA transcripts, such as the AU-rich regions that are a feature of the 3'-untranslated regions of many cytokine transcripts (34, 35). This level of posttranscriptional control has been considered to be important for the tight control of early response genes, such as proinflammatory cytokines, the expression of which may pose a threat to the host cells (36). There is evidence that these regulatory sequences direct these mRNAs for rapid degradation by a JNK-regulated, RNAse-containing recognition complex (37). The activity of JNK is also up-regulated by intracellular arachidonic acid, and this pathway has been shown by Swantek et al. (38) to be necessary for the optimal transcription of cytokine mRNAs such as TNF. Although many of these mechanisms have been best studied in the context of innate immunity and monocyte/macrophage responses, glucocorticoids have similar inhibitory effects on activated B and T cell responses. The cytokines IL-2 and interferon-
are released by activated T cells, and their effector responses proceed largely through the Janus kinase signal transduction and activation of transcription signaling intermediates. Glucocorticoids inhibit IL-2- and interferon-
-mediated activation of Janus kinase signal transduction and activation of transcription signaling (39, 40).
Finally, there are emerging data that glucocorticoids also may mediate rapid, nongenomic effects independent of changes in gene expression. Endothelial cell production of nitric oxide mediates proinflammatory and vasodilatory functions, and endothelial nitric oxide synthase has been shown to be activated by an Akt-dependent phosphorylation event. Glucocortiocoids stimulate the activity of phosphatidylinositol 3'-kinase in a glucocorticoid receptor-dependent fashion that does not appear to require transcriptional events, and phosphatidylinositol 3'-kinase, in turn, phosphorylates Akt leading to endothelial nitric oxide synthase activity (41). It is evident that glucocorticoids exert significant and broad-ranging action on diverse inflammatory activation events, with the precise hierarchy of mechanisms varying with the particular pathway induced.
Significant insight into the physiological pathways influenced by the glucocorticoid receptor also is developing as a result of advances in gene targeting and mouse genetics. For example, a selective knockout of the glucocorticoid receptor in T cells by the Muglia group (42) has shown that glucocorticoid suppression of cyclooxygenase-2 limits lethal, polyclonal T cell activation. A transgenic increase in glucocorticoid receptor gene dosage also has been shown to confer resistance to stress and endotoxic shock (43), which is in accord with a role for constitutive glucocorticoid receptor activation in host sensitivity to inflammatory stimuli.
| MACROPHAGE MIF |
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Complementing these findings were studies showing that mice receiving an ip injection of bacterial endotoxin have a strong decrease in the pituitary content of MIF protein, concurrent with an increase in plasma MIF levels (47, 48). Immunogold labeling studies showed MIF to be localized in the secretory granules of corticotrophic cells that also contain ACTH and TSH (48). Immunocytochemical analyses and ELISAs have shown that MIF accounts for approximately 0.5% of the total pituitary content, which is comparable to the other classical pituitary hormones, ACTH and prolactin (0.2% and 0.8%, respectively). CRH induces the expression and release of MIF from pituitary cells (48), and CRH-induced MIF gene transcription is mediated through a cAMP-dependent pathway involving the cAMP response element-binding protein (49). The dramatic fall in the pituitary content of MIF observed in endotoxemic mice is followed over time by a gradual elevation of MIF mRNA expression in the pituitary (47, 50). Circulating MIF levels in animals also were seen to rise 34 h after exposure to handling-induced stress, similar to the more classically described stress-related increases in circulating ACTH and glucocorticoid levels (51).
Further studies demonstrated that MIF is produced at all levels of the hypothalamopituitaryadrenal axis, with MIF protein and mRNA also present in neurons of the hypothalamus (50, 52). MIF also is expressed in the cortex of the adrenal gland. As in the pituitary, adrenal MIF levels fall after administration of lipopolysaccharide, with resynthesis of MIF occurring after a time delay (50).
It also is now well appreciated that MIF circulates normally in human plasma at levels (26 ng/ml) that exhibit a circadian rhythm (Fig. 1
) (53). Circadian immune cycles have been described in many organisms, with plasma cortisol considered to play an important role in entraining these rhythms. The phase relationship between plasma cortisol and MIF has been studied in a hypophysectomized subject on cortisone replacement and showed plasma MIF to be phase advanced by 23 h with respect to cortisol. Nevertheless, it remains unknown in humans what proportion of circulating MIF represents pituitary release, or whether additional cell or tissue types contribute to MIF in the plasma compartment (54). Indeed, studies of hypophysectomized rodents showed reduced adrenal expression of MIF whereas exogenous cortisol administered to intact rodents strongly induced MIF production in several immune and endocrine tissue types (thymus, spleen, adrenal, skin) (55).
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and TNF that require RNA transcription and protein synthesis before secretion occurs.
Elevated levels of MIF in the circulation indicate a systemic inflammatory response, and the stimulated secretion of MIF from the pituitary gland, monocyte/macrophages, and other tissue sources plays an important role in the pathogenesis of endotoxemia and sepsis. Rodent studies have shown that MIF protein is released from the pituitary, adrenal gland, lung, liver, spleen, kidney, and skin within 6 h of endotoxin injection (50). Much of this release response is due to secretion from preformed stores, because tissue MIF content falls before the induction of a MIF transcriptional response. With respect to severe, systemic inflammation, the treatment of mice with recombinant MIF has been shown to potentiate lethal endotoxemia. MIFs therapeutic potential has been highlighted by the ability of neutralizing anti-MIF antibodies to protect animals in models of severe sepsis (47, 57). In clinical studies, Beishuizen et al. (58) serially measured serum MIF, cortisol, plasma ACTH, TNF
, and IL-6 in 40 critical-care patients over a period of 14 d. MIF levels were significantly elevated in septic shock patients compared with trauma patients or normal controls. Furthermore, the temporal course of MIF expression in serum paralleled that of cortisol in the septic shock patients. A significant correlation also was observed between elevated MIF levels upon admission and occurrence of death. These data were complemented by Joshi et al. (59), who reported elevated MIF levels in multitrauma patients that correlated with positive cultures for infecting bacteria.
| REGULATORY ACTION OF MIF ON GLUCOCORTICOID IMMUNOSUPPRESSION |
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These observations have led to a physiological model for MIF action whereby basal and stimulated MIF production acts in concert with glucocorticoids to regulate the immune and inflammatory response. This MIF-glucocorticoid dyad acts locally to control the immunosuppresive effects of glucocorticoids, the levels of which may increase due to the systemic stress response, and prevent inhibition of the necessary proinflammatory and antimicrobial actions of monocytes/macrophages. High systemic levels of glucocorticoids characterize the fight or flight response, and glucocorticoids act importantly to maintain systemic electrolyte, glucose, and energy homeostasis. Thus, the glucocorticoid-antagonistic effects of MIF represent a mechanism by which the host maintains a functioning immune response during situations of high endogenous glucocorticoid production, such as trauma, stress, or life-threatening infection. The precise outcome of the host responsemicrobial elimination and tissue repair vs. excessive inflammation and tissue or end-organ damagewould be the net result of the interaction between MIF and glucocorticoids on target cells (Fig. 4
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Inhibition of the antiinflammatory and immunosuppressive properties of glucocorticoids may represent an important mechanism of action for MIFs global, proinflammatory effect, and MIFs position within the inflammatory cascade may be to not only control the magnitude of the inflammatory response but to act in a permissive fashion to control the set point of this response. Inhibition of MIF action therefore may be a powerful pharmacological strategy for the treatment of inflammatory and autoimmune disease, especially those conditions that are characterized by resistance to steroid therapy or by steroid dependence. Such approaches are presently in clinical development. By removing an endogenous glucocorticoid counterregulator, MIF neutralization could decrease the steroid requirement for a number of refractory autoimmune diseases and perhaps allow the hosts own glucocorticoids to more effectively control excessive inflammatory responses (64, 65, 66). Within pharmacology, the long-sought-after goal of developing synthetic glucocorticoids that might maintain antiinflammatory properties without affecting bone and glucose metabolism so far has not been attained, further bolstering the argument for targeting MIF (67).
During stress, severe trauma, or life-threatening infection, when high levels of glucocorticoids are present, the antagonistic effects of MIF on glucocorticoids likely represent a mechanism by which the host maintains a functioning immune response. Further pointing to the regulatory role of MIF on glucocorticoid action was the finding that the circadian fluctuation in plasma MIF closely follows glucocorticoid levels. As described above, MIF levels increase in the early morning, offsetting the immunosuppressive effects of an early morning increase in plasma cortisol (53). One function of the morning rise in cortisol may be in the transition from an inactive supine position to active vertical posture by promoting sodium and water retention and increasing blood pressure. Higher levels of MIF may separate these physiological effects of cortisol from its action on immune function, thereby maintaining normal immune responsiveness.
One question posed by the functional interaction between MIF and glucocorticoid hormones is the extent to which these effects are specific to the immune system or may also extend to the nonimmunological properties of glucocorticoids. An important metabolic action of glucocorticoids is to increase the hepatic activity of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase (PEPCK), which is the rate-limiting enzyme for gluconeogenesis. In a study of cultured liver cells, MIF showed no demonstrable effect on PEPCK activity in these cells and even potentiated glucocorticoid-induced PEPCK activity (68), confirming the notion that the overriding activity of high MIF levels may separate the physiological effects of cortisol from MIFs action on immune function.
MIF is expressed in high levels in rheumatoid arthritis (69), systemic lupus erythematosus (70), inflammatory bowel disease (71), and asthma (72), which are clinical conditions where steroid resistance occurs commonly. In each of these conditions, the presence of high-expression MIF alleles (described below), predispose patients to more severe disease (73, 74, 75, 76, 77). MIF levels in a small study of asthmatic subjects did not appear to correlate with steroid treatment (78), but such correlations may be confounded by the following situation: in the lung, MIF is produced by infiltrating inflammatory cells, including eosinophils, and many patients are maintained on oral or inhaled glucocorticoids.
| MOLECULAR MECHANISMS OF MIF GLUCOCORTICOID REGULATORY ACTIVITY |
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Mitchell et al. (79) showed that MIF had the ability to stimulate the ERK1/2 MAPK family in a sustained fashion. Activated ERK1/2 phosphorylates a number of cytosolic proteins and transcription factors including cPLA2, which is an important component of the proinflammatory cascade. The product of cPLA2, arachidonic acid, is the precursor for the synthesis of prostaglandins and leukotrienes. Arachidonic acid also activates JNK, which is required for the efficient translation of the mRNA for TNF
and other cytokines (38). As discussed earlier, cPLA2 is strongly inhibited by glucocorticoids by a pathway involving the induction of annexin-1. MIF activates cPLA2 in the presence of immunosuppressive concentrations of glucocortiocoids, providing one mechanism whereby MIF overrides glucocorticoid-mediated antiinflammatory action. Thus, the inhibitory effect of glucocorticoids on cytokine mRNA translation may be counterregulated by MIF.
The immunosuppressive and antiinflammatory effects of glucocorticoids also have been described in settings to depend on the potent inhibition of the transcription factor NF-
B. NF-
B is normally maintained in an inactive, cytosolic form in complex with the inhibitory counterpart I
B
. Innate signals induce I
B
degradation, thus allowing NF-
B to translocate into the nucleus and effect the transcription of numerous genes for cytokines, costimulatory, and adhesion molecules (80). Glucocorticoids inhibit NF-
B activation, in part, by increasing the expression of I
B
(30, 81), which then maintains NF-
B in its inactive cytosolic form. In a study published in 2000, Daun and Cannon (82) found that MIF counteracts the glucocorticoid-mediated inhibition of NF-
B by preventing glucocorticoids from increasing expression of I
B
. The glucocorticoid induction of IkB
occurs in few cell types, however, and the relevance of this mechanism of glucocorticoid immunosuppression in primary cells and under physiological settings remains unknown.
The first description of a specific, intracellular target and binding partner for MIF came with the report of Kleemann et al. (83) showing that MIF inhibited the activity of the transcriptional regulator c-Jun activation domain binding protein 1 (JAB1). This study was noteworthy in that evidence was presented that extracellular MIF was endocytosed and translocated across the endosomal membrane, either in intact form or after processing to a redox active domain, to enter the cytosolic compartment and interact with JAB1. JAB1 is the fifth subunit of the COP9 signalosome and a coactivator of AP-1 transcription and promotes degradation of the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor, p27kip. Interestingly, there is experimental evidence that the COP9 signalosome may interact with I
B
kinase, which is necessary for the activation of NF-
B (84). Hong et al. (85) showed that the COP9 signalosome interacts with I
B
kinase through its third subunit (CSN3) and inhibits TNF-induced NF-
B activation. Thus, MIF and glucocorticoid action may additionally converge on the COP9 signalosome to modulate I
B
.
With the discovery that MIF signaling requires the type II transmembrane receptor CD74, additional insight into MIF signal transduction was provided (86, 87). CD74 is the membrane-expressed form of the class II chaperone, invariant chain. Leng et al. (86) used an expression cloning and selection strategy to identify CD74 and established its requirement for MIF-induced activation of the ERK1/2 MAPK cascade, cell proliferation, and PGE2 production. More recently, CD44, which activates nonreceptor tyrosine kinases, has been identified as the signaling component of the MIF-CD74 receptor complex (88). CD74 mediates MIF binding to cell surfaces, but CD44 is required for the MIF-induced ERK1/2 phosphorylation. MIF binding induces the serine phosphorylation of the CD74 and CD44 intracytoplasmic domains, leading to the activation of the Src tyrosine kinase and, subsequently, ERK1/2 phosphorylation.
ERK activation by this pathway also depends on MIF stimulated activity of cAMP-dependent protein kinase A. As mentioned above, MIF has the unusual ability to activate ERK1/2 in a transient or a sustained fashion; the later pathway occurs in adherent cells as a consequence of integrin coligation (89). The temporal regulation of ERK1/2 activation by MIF has been shown recently to require the activity of the intracellular JAB1 protein. High JAB1 expression inhibits sustained, but not transient, ERK1/2 phosphorylation, whereas low JAB1 levels are sufficient for transient activation (90). This effect may be due to the known role of JAB1 in the COP9 signalosome, where it regulates the degradation of signaling components (91), but the exact mechanism requires additional investigation.
A growing body of evidence now indicates that an important mechanism by which MIF inhibits glucocorticoid action is by the suppression of MKP-1 (92, 93). Glucocorticoids normally induce the expression of MKP-1, which inactivates the proinflammatory ERK1/2, JNK, and p38 pathways. Roger et al. (92) found that MIF acts in an autocrine fashion to override glucocorticoid-induced MKP-1 expression and inhibition of cytokine production, thus identifying MKP-1 as a significant target for MIF overriding effects on posttranscriptional regulation of cytokine production. Recent studies by Aeberli et al. (93) using MIF-knockout macrophages showed an enhanced sensitivity of these cells to glucocorticoids, higher expression of MKP-1, and a corresponding reduction in the levels of p38 MAPK when compared with wild-type cells. Dose-dependent reversal of glucocorticoid-induced MKP-1 by MIF, and inhibition of conditioned medium effects on MKP-1 by anti-MIF monoclonal antibody, confirm the regulatory effect of MIF on glucocorticoid-induced MKP-1 expression. MIF was not found in these studies to directly influence cytosolic IkB
levels or NF-
B binding to the TNF promoter.
Figure 5
summarizes pathways that have been identified in the MIF regulation of glucocorticoid immunosuppression. Notwithstanding these insights, much remains to be elucidated with respect to MIF-glucocorticoid interactions. The precise role of MIF in directly modulating NF-
B activation remains controversial although several indirect pathways have been described. The mechanisms by which ERK1/2 MAPK promotes downstream cytokine production are not completely known, and the pathway may vary in different cells or in response to different promotional stimuli. Similarly, it is unclear how the glucocorticoid induction of MKP-1 reduces cytokine mRNA and protein synthesis, and the molecular pathway by which MIF overcomes this effect. A likely possibility, as suggested by Van Molle and Libert (94), may be by the stabilization of cytokine mRNA by MAPK-activated protein kinase 2 (MAPKAPK2), which is a downstream target of the p38 MAPK. MAPKAPK2 modulates the activity of the AU-rich elements in the 3'-untranslated region of cytokine mRNAs. As mentioned above, these regulatory elements normally confer instability to highly inducible and tightly regulated mRNAs. MIF inhibits MKP-1 induction, leading to more active p38 and MAPKAPK2, and enhanced AU-rich element-dependent cytokine mRNA translation.
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| MIF GENETICS |
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The prevalence and the population stratification of different MIF promoter polymorphisms suggest that the MIF locus represents a balanced polymorphism that developed in response to different selective pressures over evolutionary time. Emerging evidence in support of MIF in the innate response to malaria (98, 99, 100) and other parasitic infections that have long afflicted human populations also supports this view. An individuals MIF genotype thus regulates his or her physiological MIF response and, by extension, the attendant ability of MIF to counterregulate the effects of glucocorticoids. This interaction highlights the importance that this functional polymorphism may have on disease development, the efficacy of glucocorticoid treatment, and the development of steroid resistance. Genetic susceptibility to enhanced MIF expression within the neuroendocrine system also may represent an important determinant of disease manifestations.
| CONCLUSION: MIFS UNIQUE, UPSTREAM POSITION IN HOST IMMUNITY |
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MIFs unique position as a glucocorticoid antagonist coupled with its allelic structure, which is suggestive of a transcriptional rheostat, place this mediator in a unique position to control the innate response to diverse, invasive stimuli. The genetically defined variation in human MIF responsiveness also offers the prospect of a naturally defined therapeutic window that may guide emerging therapies directed at MIF pathways (112).
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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| FOOTNOTES |
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Disclosure Statement: The authors have nothing to disclose.
First Published Online March 27, 2007
Abbreviations: AP-1, Activator protein 1; cPLA2
, cytosolic phospholipase A2
; HPA, hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal; JAB1, c-Jun activation domain binding protein 1; JNK, Jun N-terminal kinase; MAPKAPK2, MAPK-activated protein kinase 2; MIF, macrophage migration inhibitory factor; MKP-1, MAPK phosphatase I; NF-
B, nuclear factor-
B; PEPCK, phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase.
Received for publication February 1, 2007. Accepted for publication March 12, 2007.
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