Tribbles1 is host protective during in vivo mycobacterial infection.

Elife

The Bateson Centre, School of Medicine and Population Health, Faculty of Health, University of Sheffield, Sheffield, United Kingdom.

Published: June 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Tuberculosis is a leading global health threat, necessitating new treatment strategies due to rising antibiotic resistance.
  • The pseudokinase Tribbles1 (Trib1) plays a critical role in regulating macrophage functions and inflammation, making it a promising target for new therapies against infections like tuberculosis.
  • Research using a zebrafish model revealed that overexpressing Trib1 provides significant protection against mycobacterial infection, suggesting that increasing Trib1 levels in macrophages could enhance immune responses and improve treatment outcomes for tuberculosis.

Article Abstract

Tuberculosis is a major global health problem and is one of the top 10 causes of death worldwide. There is a pressing need for new treatments that circumvent emerging antibiotic resistance. parasitises macrophages, reprogramming them to establish a niche in which to proliferate, therefore macrophage manipulation is a potential host-directed therapy if druggable molecular targets could be identified. The pseudokinase Tribbles1 (Trib1) regulates multiple innate immune processes and inflammatory profiles making it a potential drug target in infections. Trib1 controls macrophage function, cytokine production, and macrophage polarisation. Despite wide-ranging effects on leukocyte biology, data exploring the roles of Tribbles in infection in vivo are limited. Here, we identify that human Tribbles1 is expressed in monocytes and is upregulated at the transcript level after stimulation with mycobacterial antigen. To investigate the mechanistic roles of Tribbles in the host response to mycobacteria in vivo, we used a zebrafish (Mm) infection tuberculosis model. Zebrafish Tribbles family members were characterised and shown to have substantial mRNA and protein sequence homology to their human orthologues. overexpression was host-protective against Mm infection, reducing burden by approximately 50%. Conversely, knockdown/knockout exhibited increased infection. Mechanistically, overexpression significantly increased the levels of proinflammatory factors and nitric oxide. The host-protective effect of was found to be dependent on the E3 ubiquitin kinase Cop1. These findings highlight the importance of Trib1 and Cop1 as immune regulators during infection in vivo and suggest that enhancing macrophage TRIB1 levels may provide a tractable therapeutic intervention to improve bacterial infection outcomes in tuberculosis.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11186633PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.95980DOI Listing

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