Characterization of dsRNA-induced pancreatitis model reveals the regulatory role of <i>IFN regulatory factor 2</i> ( <i>Irf2</i> ) in <i>trypsinogen5</i> gene transcription

Hideki Hayashi(University of Nagasaki), Tomoko Kohno(Toxicologie, Pharmacologie et Signalisation Cellulaire), Kiyoshi Yasui(Toxicologie, Pharmacologie et Signalisation Cellulaire), Hiroyuki Murota(Advanced Dermatology), Tohru Kimura(Graduate School USA), Gordon S. Duncan(Ontario Institute for Cancer Research), Tomoki Nakashima(Tokyo Medical and Dental University), Kazuo Yamamoto(Ontario Institute for Cancer Research), Ichiro Katayama(Toxicologie, Pharmacologie et Signalisation Cellulaire), Yuhua Ma(Toxicologie, Pharmacologie et Signalisation Cellulaire), Koon Jiew Chua(Toxicologie, Pharmacologie et Signalisation Cellulaire), Takashi Suematsu(Toxicologie, Pharmacologie et Signalisation Cellulaire), Isao Shimokawa(University of Nagasaki), Shizuo Akira(The University of Osaka), Yoshinao Kubo(Toxicologie, Pharmacologie et Signalisation Cellulaire), Tak W. Mak(Ontario Institute for Cancer Research), T. Matsuyama(Toxicologie, Pharmacologie et Signalisation Cellulaire)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
October 31, 2011
Cited by 19Open Access
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Abstract

Mice deficient for interferon regulatory factor (Irf)2 (Irf2(-/-) mice) exhibit immunological abnormalities and cannot survive lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus infection. The pancreas of these animals is highly inflamed, a phenotype replicated by treatment with poly(I:C), a synthetic double-stranded RNA. Trypsinogen5 mRNA was constitutively up-regulated about 1,000-fold in Irf2(-/-) mice compared with controls as assessed by quantitative RT-PCR. Further knockout of IFNα/β receptor 1(Ifnar1) abolished poly(I:C)-induced pancreatitis but had no effect on the constitutive up-regulation of trypsinogen5 gene, indicating crucial type I IFN signaling to elicit the inflammation. Analysis of Ifnar1(-/-) mice confirmed type I IFN-dependent transcriptional activation of dsRNA-sensing pattern recognition receptor genes MDA5, RIG-I, and TLR3, which induced poly(I:C)-dependent cell death in acinar cells in the absence of IRF2. We speculate that Trypsin5, the trypsinogen5 gene product, leaking from dead acinar cells triggers a chain reaction leading to lethal pancreatitis in Irf2(-/-) mice because it is resistant to a major endogenous trypsin inhibitor, Spink3.


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