Life without TTP: apparent absence of an important anti-inflammatory protein in birds

Author:

Lai Wi S.1,Stumpo Deborah J.1,Kennington Elizabeth A.1,Burkholder Adam B.2,Ward James M.2,Fargo David L.2,Blackshear Perry J.13

Affiliation:

1. Laboratory of Signal Transduction, National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, Research Triangle Park, North Carolina;

2. Integrative Bioinformatics Group, National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, Research Triangle Park, North Carolina; and

3. the 3Departments of Medicine and Biochemistry, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina

Abstract

Both innate and adaptive immunity in birds are different from their mammalian counterparts. Understanding bird immunity is important because of the enormous potential impact of avian infectious diseases, both in their role as food animals and as potential carriers of zoonotic diseases in man. The anti-inflammatory protein tristetraprolin (TTP) is an important component of the mammalian innate immune response, in that it binds to and destabilizes key cytokine mRNAs. TTP knockout mice exhibit a severe systemic inflammatory syndrome, and they are abnormally sensitive to innate immune stimuli such as LPS. TTP orthologs have been found in most vertebrates studied, including frogs. Here, we attempted to identify TTP orthologs in chicken and other birds, using database searches and deep mRNA sequencing. Although sequences encoding the two other widely expressed TTP family members, ZFP36L1 and ZFP36L2, were identified, we did not find sequences corresponding to TTP in any bird species. Sequences corresponding to TTP were identified in both lizards and alligators, close evolutionary relatives of birds. The induction kinetics of Zfp36l1 and Zfp36l2 mRNAs in LPS-stimulated chicken macrophages or serum-stimulated chick embryo fibroblasts did not resemble the normal mammalian TTP response to these stimuli, suggesting that the other two family members might not compensate for the TTP deficiency in regulating rapidly induced mRNA targets. Several mammalian TTP target transcripts have chicken counterparts that contain one or more potential TTP binding sites, raising the possibility that birds express other proteins that subsume TTP's function as a rapidly inducible regulator of AU-rich element (ARE)-dependent mRNA turnover.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology (medical),Physiology

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