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  • Mycotoxin Patulin Suppresses Innate Immune Responses by Mitochondrial Dysfunction and p62/Sequestosome-1-dependent Mitophagy.

Mycotoxin Patulin Suppresses Innate Immune Responses by Mitochondrial Dysfunction and p62/Sequestosome-1-dependent Mitophagy.

The Journal of biological chemistry (2016-07-28)
Wan-Ting Tsai, Yin-Chiu Lo, Ming-Sian Wu, Chia-Yang Li, Yi-Ping Kuo, Yi-Hui Lai, Yu Tsai, Kai-Chieh Chen, Tsung-Hsien Chuang, Chun-Hsu Yao, Jinq-Chyi Lee, Li-Chung Hsu, John T-A Hsu, Guann-Yi Yu
ABSTRACT

Innate immune responses are important for pathogen elimination and adaptive immune response activation. However, excess inflammation may contribute to immunopathology and disease progression (e.g. inflammation-associated hepatocellular carcinoma). Immune modulation resulting from pattern recognition receptor-induced responses is a potential strategy for controlling immunopathology and related diseases. This study demonstrates that the mycotoxin patulin suppresses Toll-like receptor- and RIG-I/MAVS-dependent cytokine production through GSH depletion, mitochondrial dysfunction, the activation of p62-associated mitophagy, and p62-TRAF6 interaction. Blockade of autophagy restored the immunosuppressive activity of patulin, and pharmacological activation of p62-dependent mitophagy directly reduced RIG-I-like receptor-dependent inflammatory cytokine production. These results demonstrated that p62-dependent mitophagy has an immunosuppressive role to innate immune response and might serve as a potential immunomodulatory target for inflammation-associated diseases.

MATERIALS
Product Number
Brand
Product Description

Sigma-Aldrich
Z-Leu-Leu-Leu-al, ≥90% (HPLC)
Sigma-Aldrich
Anti-Tumor Necrosis Factor-α Antibody, Chemicon®, from rabbit