Direct and Indirect Induction by 1,25-Dihydroxyvitamin D3 of the NOD2/CARD15-Defensin β2 Innate Immune Pathway Defective in Crohn Disease

Tiantian Wang(Montreal General Hospital), Basel Dabbas(Montreal General Hospital), David Laperrière(Institute for Research in Immunology and Cancer), Ari J. Bitton(Montreal General Hospital), Hafid Soualhine(Montreal General Hospital), Luz E. Tavera-Mendoza(McGill University), Serge Dionne(McGill University), Marc J. Servant(Université de Montréal), Alain Bitton(Montreal General Hospital), Ernest G. Seidman(Montreal General Hospital), Sylvie Mader(Institute for Research in Immunology and Cancer), Marcel A. Behr(Montreal General Hospital), John H. White(Montreal General Hospital)
Journal of Biological Chemistry
November 30, 2009
Cited by 385Open Access
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Abstract

Vitamin D signaling through its nuclear vitamin D receptor has emerged as a key regulator of innate immunity in humans. Here we show that hormonal vitamin D, 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D(3), robustly stimulates expression of pattern recognition receptor NOD2/CARD15/IBD1 gene and protein in primary human monocytic and epithelial cells. The vitamin D receptor signals through distal enhancers in the NOD2 gene, whose function was validated by chromatin immunoprecipitation and chromatin conformation capture assays. A key downstream signaling consequence of NOD2 activation by agonist muramyl dipeptide is stimulation of NF-kappaB transcription factor function, which induces expression of the gene encoding antimicrobial peptide defensin beta2 (DEFB2/HBD2). Pretreatment with 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D(3) synergistically induced NF-kappaB function and expression of genes encoding DEFB2/HBD2 and antimicrobial peptide cathelicidin in the presence of muramyl dipeptide. Importantly, this synergistic response was also seen in macrophages from a donor wild type for NOD2 but was absent in macrophages from patients with Crohn disease homozygous for non-functional NOD2 variants. These studies provide strong molecular links between vitamin D deficiency and the genetics of Crohn disease, a chronic incurable inflammatory bowel condition, as Crohn's pathogenesis is associated with attenuated NOD2 or DEFB2/HBD2 function.


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