Login / Signup

TLR5 participates in the TLR4 receptor complex and promotes MyD88-dependent signaling in environmental lung injury.

Salik HussainCollin G JohnsonJoseph SciurbaXianglin MengVandy P StoberCaini LiuJaime M Cyphert-DalyKatarzyna BulekWen QianAlma SolisYosuke SakamachiCarol S TrempusJim J AloorKym M GowdyW Michael FosterJohn W HollingsworthRobert M TigheXiaoxia LiMichael B FesslerStavros Garantziotis
Published in: eLife (2020)
Lung disease causes significant morbidity and mortality, and is exacerbated by environmental injury, for example through lipopolysaccharide (LPS) or ozone (O3). Toll-like receptors (TLRs) orchestrate immune responses to injury by recognizing pathogen- or danger-associated molecular patterns. TLR4, the prototypic receptor for LPS, also mediates inflammation after O3, triggered by endogenous hyaluronan. Regulation of TLR4 signaling is incompletely understood. TLR5, the flagellin receptor, is expressed in alveolar macrophages, and regulates immune responses to environmental injury. Using in vivo animal models of TLR4-mediated inflammations (LPS, O3, hyaluronan), we show that TLR5 impacts the in vivo response to LPS, hyaluronan and O3. We demonstrate that immune cells of human carriers of a dominant negative TLR5 allele have decreased inflammatory response to O3 exposure ex vivo and LPS exposure in vitro. Using primary murine macrophages, we find that TLR5 physically associates with TLR4 and biases TLR4 signaling towards the MyD88 pathway. Our results suggest an updated paradigm for TLR4/TLR5 signaling.
Keyphrases
  • toll like receptor
  • inflammatory response
  • immune response
  • nuclear factor
  • lps induced
  • oxidative stress
  • endothelial cells
  • risk assessment
  • hydrogen peroxide
  • binding protein