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Tytuł pozycji:

Molecular mechanisms of ZC3H12C/Reg-3 biological activity and its involvement in Psoriasis pathology

Tytuł:
Molecular mechanisms of ZC3H12C/Reg-3 biological activity and its involvement in Psoriasis pathology
Autorzy:
Sowińska, Weronika
Solecka, Aleksandra
Grygier, Beata
Kwitniewski, Mateusz
Fu, Mingui
Morytko, Agnieszka
Kasza, Aneta
Wawro, Mateusz
Kwiecińska, Patrycja
Wawro, Karolina
Cichy, Joanna
Kochan, Jakub
Data publikacji:
2021
Słowa kluczowe:
RNases
ZC3H12/MCPIP/Regnases
psoriasis
transcripts turnover
inflammation
Język:
angielski
ISBN, ISSN:
14220067
Prawa:
Udzielam licencji. Uznanie autorstwa 4.0 Międzynarodowa
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/legalcode.pl
Dostawca treści:
Repozytorium Uniwersytetu Jagiellońskiego
Artykuł
The members of the ZC3H12/MCPIP/Regnase family of RNases have emerged as important regulators of inflammation. In contrast to Regnase-1, -2 and -4, a thorough characterization of Regnase-3 (Reg-3) has not yet been explored. Here we demonstrate that Reg-3 differs from other family members in terms of NYN/PIN domain features, cellular localization pattern and substrate specificity. Together with Reg-1, the most comprehensively characterized family member, Reg-3 shared IL-6, IER-3 and Reg-1 mRNAs, but not IL-1 beta mRNA, as substrates. In addition, Reg-3 was found to be the only family member which regulates transcript levels of TNF, a cytokine implicated in chronic inflammatory diseases including psoriasis. Previous meta-analysis of genome-wide association studies revealed Reg-3 to be among new psoriasis susceptibility loci. Here we demonstrate that Reg-3 transcript levels are increased in psoriasis patient skin tissue and in an experimental model of psoriasis, supporting the immunomodulatory role of Reg-3 in psoriasis, possibly through degradation of mRNA for TNF and other factors such as Reg-1. On the other hand, Reg-1 was found to destabilize Reg-3 transcripts, suggesting reciprocal regulation between Reg-3 and Reg-1 in the skin. We found that either Reg-1 or Reg-3 were expressed in human keratinocytes in vitro. However, in contrast to robustly upregulated Reg-1 mRNA levels, Reg-3 expression was not affected in the epidermis of psoriasis patients. Taken together, these data suggest that epidermal levels of Reg-3 are negatively regulated by Reg-1 in psoriasis, and that Reg-1 and Reg-3 are both involved in psoriasis pathophysiology through controlling, at least in part different transcripts.

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