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Dual specificity phosphatase 1 knockout mice show enhanced susceptibility to anaphylaxis but are sensitive to glucocorticoids
J.V. Maier, S. Brema, J. Tuckermann, U. Herzer, M. Klein, M. Stassen, , A.C.B. Cato
Published in
2007
PMID: 17636038
Volume: 21
   
Issue: 11
Pages: 2663 - 2671
Abstract
Dual specificity phosphatase DUSP1 (otherwise known as mitogen-activated phosphatase 1 or MKP-1) dephosphorylates MAPKs, particularly p38, and negatively regulates innate immunity. Recent studies have shown that the DUSP1 gene is transcriptionally up-regulated by glucocorticoids (GCs) and that the antiinflammatory action of GCs is impaired in DUSP1-/- mice. Here we show that GC-mediated dephosphorylation of ERK-1 and ERK-2 activated by IgE receptor cross-linking is unimpaired in bone marrow-derived mast cells (BMMCs) of DUSP1-/- mice. Dephosphorylation of phospho-p38 MAPK is impaired but only at early times of GC treatment. Proinflammatory cytokine and chemokine gene expression (CCL2, IL-6, TNFα) is still down-regulated by GCs in BMMCs from DUSP1-/- mice, suggesting a compensatory mechanism for the GC action in these mice. In both DUSP1+/+ and DUSP1-/- BMMCs, GC up-regulated the expression of several phosphatase genes (DUSP2, DUSP4, DUSP9, and PEST domain-enriched tyrosine phosphatase). DUSP1-/- mice show enhanced mast cell degranulation and are highly susceptible to anaphylaxis, but these effects are still down-regulated by GCs. GCs also repressed other inflammatory responses such as dinitrofluorobenzene-induced contact hypersensitivity and lipopolysaccharide- induced mortality in DUSP1-/- mice. Thus GC-mediated antiinflammatory action is largely independent of DUSP1. Copyright © 2007 by The Endocrine Society.
About the journal
JournalMolecular Endocrinology
ISSN08888809