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Heme amplifies the innate immune response to microbial molecules through spleen tyrosine kinase (Syk)-dependent reactive oxygen species generation.


ABSTRACT: Infectious diseases that cause hemolysis are among the most threatening human diseases, because of severity and/or global distribution. In these conditions, hemeproteins and heme are released, but whether heme affects the inflammatory response to microorganism molecules remains to be characterized. Here, we show that heme increased the lethality and cytokine secretion induced by LPS in vivo and enhanced the secretion of cytokines by macrophages stimulated with various agonists of innate immune receptors. Activation of nuclear factor ?B (NF-?B) and MAPKs and the generation of reactive oxygen species were essential to the increase in cytokine production induced by heme plus LPS. This synergistic effect of heme and LPS was blocked by a selective inhibitor of spleen tyrosine kinase (Syk) and was abrogated in dendritic cells deficient in Syk. Moreover, inhibition of Syk and the downstream molecules PKC and PI3K reduced the reactive oxygen species generation by heme. Our results highlight a mechanism by which heme amplifies the secretion of cytokines triggered by microbial molecule activation and indicates possible pathways for therapeutic intervention during hemolytic infectious diseases.

SUBMITTER: Fernandez PL 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC2963404 | biostudies-other | 2010 Oct

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-other

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Heme amplifies the innate immune response to microbial molecules through spleen tyrosine kinase (Syk)-dependent reactive oxygen species generation.

Fernandez Patricia L PL   Dutra Fabianno F FF   Alves Letícia L   Figueiredo Rodrigo T RT   Mourão-Sa Diego D   Fortes Guilherme B GB   Bergstrand Sophie S   Lönn David D   Cevallos Ricardo R RR   Pereira Renata M S RMS   Lopes Ulisses G UG   Travassos Leonardo H LH   Paiva Claudia N CN   Bozza Marcelo T MT  

The Journal of biological chemistry 20100820 43


Infectious diseases that cause hemolysis are among the most threatening human diseases, because of severity and/or global distribution. In these conditions, hemeproteins and heme are released, but whether heme affects the inflammatory response to microorganism molecules remains to be characterized. Here, we show that heme increased the lethality and cytokine secretion induced by LPS in vivo and enhanced the secretion of cytokines by macrophages stimulated with various agonists of innate immune r  ...[more]

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