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Lack of Involvement of CEP Adducts in TLR Activation and in Angiogenesis

Proteins that are post-translationally adducted with 2-(ω-carboxyethyl)pyrrole (CEP) have been proposed to play a pathogenic role in age-related macular degeneration, by inducing angiogenesis in a Toll Like Receptor 2 (TLR2)-dependent manner. We have investigated the involvement of CEP adducts in an...

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Autores principales: Gounarides, John, Cobb, Jennifer S., Zhou, Jing, Cook, Frank, Yang, Xuemei, Yin, Hong, Meredith, Erik, Rao, Chang, Huang, Qian, Xu, YongYao, Anderson, Karen, De Erkenez, Andrea, Liao, Sha-Mei, Crowley, Maura, Buchanan, Natasha, Poor, Stephen, Qiu, Yubin, Fassbender, Elizabeth, Shen, Siyuan, Woolfenden, Amber, Jensen, Amy, Cepeda, Rosemarie, Etemad-Gilbertson, Bijan, Giza, Shelby, Mogi, Muneto, Jaffee, Bruce, Azarian, Sassan
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4208838/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25343517
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0111472
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author Gounarides, John
Cobb, Jennifer S.
Zhou, Jing
Cook, Frank
Yang, Xuemei
Yin, Hong
Meredith, Erik
Rao, Chang
Huang, Qian
Xu, YongYao
Anderson, Karen
De Erkenez, Andrea
Liao, Sha-Mei
Crowley, Maura
Buchanan, Natasha
Poor, Stephen
Qiu, Yubin
Fassbender, Elizabeth
Shen, Siyuan
Woolfenden, Amber
Jensen, Amy
Cepeda, Rosemarie
Etemad-Gilbertson, Bijan
Giza, Shelby
Mogi, Muneto
Jaffee, Bruce
Azarian, Sassan
author_facet Gounarides, John
Cobb, Jennifer S.
Zhou, Jing
Cook, Frank
Yang, Xuemei
Yin, Hong
Meredith, Erik
Rao, Chang
Huang, Qian
Xu, YongYao
Anderson, Karen
De Erkenez, Andrea
Liao, Sha-Mei
Crowley, Maura
Buchanan, Natasha
Poor, Stephen
Qiu, Yubin
Fassbender, Elizabeth
Shen, Siyuan
Woolfenden, Amber
Jensen, Amy
Cepeda, Rosemarie
Etemad-Gilbertson, Bijan
Giza, Shelby
Mogi, Muneto
Jaffee, Bruce
Azarian, Sassan
author_sort Gounarides, John
collection PubMed
description Proteins that are post-translationally adducted with 2-(ω-carboxyethyl)pyrrole (CEP) have been proposed to play a pathogenic role in age-related macular degeneration, by inducing angiogenesis in a Toll Like Receptor 2 (TLR2)-dependent manner. We have investigated the involvement of CEP adducts in angiogenesis and TLR activation, to assess the therapeutic potential of inhibiting CEP adducts and TLR2 for ocular angiogenesis. As tool reagents, several CEP-adducted proteins and peptides were synthetically generated by published methodology and adduction was confirmed by NMR and LC-MS/MS analyses. Structural studies showed significant changes in secondary structure in CEP-adducted proteins but not the untreated proteins. Similar structural changes were also observed in the treated unadducted proteins, which were treated by the same adduction method except for one critical step required to form the CEP group. Thus some structural changes were unrelated to CEP groups and were artificially induced by the synthesis method. In biological studies, the CEP-adducted proteins and peptides failed to activate TLR2 in cell-based assays and in an in vivo TLR2-mediated retinal leukocyte infiltration model. Neither CEP adducts nor TLR agonists were able to induce angiogenesis in a tube formation assay. In vivo, treatment of animals with CEP-adducted protein had no effect on laser-induced choroidal neovascularization. Furthermore, in vivo inactivation of TLR2 by deficiency in Myeloid Differentiation factor 88 (Myd88) had no effect on abrasion-induced corneal neovascularization. Thus the CEP-TLR2 axis, which is implicated in other wound angiogenesis models, does not appear to play a pathological role in a corneal wound angiogenesis model. Collectively, our data do not support the mechanism of action of CEP adducts in TLR2-mediated angiogenesis proposed by others.
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spelling pubmed-42088382014-10-27 Lack of Involvement of CEP Adducts in TLR Activation and in Angiogenesis Gounarides, John Cobb, Jennifer S. Zhou, Jing Cook, Frank Yang, Xuemei Yin, Hong Meredith, Erik Rao, Chang Huang, Qian Xu, YongYao Anderson, Karen De Erkenez, Andrea Liao, Sha-Mei Crowley, Maura Buchanan, Natasha Poor, Stephen Qiu, Yubin Fassbender, Elizabeth Shen, Siyuan Woolfenden, Amber Jensen, Amy Cepeda, Rosemarie Etemad-Gilbertson, Bijan Giza, Shelby Mogi, Muneto Jaffee, Bruce Azarian, Sassan PLoS One Research Article Proteins that are post-translationally adducted with 2-(ω-carboxyethyl)pyrrole (CEP) have been proposed to play a pathogenic role in age-related macular degeneration, by inducing angiogenesis in a Toll Like Receptor 2 (TLR2)-dependent manner. We have investigated the involvement of CEP adducts in angiogenesis and TLR activation, to assess the therapeutic potential of inhibiting CEP adducts and TLR2 for ocular angiogenesis. As tool reagents, several CEP-adducted proteins and peptides were synthetically generated by published methodology and adduction was confirmed by NMR and LC-MS/MS analyses. Structural studies showed significant changes in secondary structure in CEP-adducted proteins but not the untreated proteins. Similar structural changes were also observed in the treated unadducted proteins, which were treated by the same adduction method except for one critical step required to form the CEP group. Thus some structural changes were unrelated to CEP groups and were artificially induced by the synthesis method. In biological studies, the CEP-adducted proteins and peptides failed to activate TLR2 in cell-based assays and in an in vivo TLR2-mediated retinal leukocyte infiltration model. Neither CEP adducts nor TLR agonists were able to induce angiogenesis in a tube formation assay. In vivo, treatment of animals with CEP-adducted protein had no effect on laser-induced choroidal neovascularization. Furthermore, in vivo inactivation of TLR2 by deficiency in Myeloid Differentiation factor 88 (Myd88) had no effect on abrasion-induced corneal neovascularization. Thus the CEP-TLR2 axis, which is implicated in other wound angiogenesis models, does not appear to play a pathological role in a corneal wound angiogenesis model. Collectively, our data do not support the mechanism of action of CEP adducts in TLR2-mediated angiogenesis proposed by others. Public Library of Science 2014-10-24 /pmc/articles/PMC4208838/ /pubmed/25343517 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0111472 Text en © 2014 Gounarides et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Gounarides, John
Cobb, Jennifer S.
Zhou, Jing
Cook, Frank
Yang, Xuemei
Yin, Hong
Meredith, Erik
Rao, Chang
Huang, Qian
Xu, YongYao
Anderson, Karen
De Erkenez, Andrea
Liao, Sha-Mei
Crowley, Maura
Buchanan, Natasha
Poor, Stephen
Qiu, Yubin
Fassbender, Elizabeth
Shen, Siyuan
Woolfenden, Amber
Jensen, Amy
Cepeda, Rosemarie
Etemad-Gilbertson, Bijan
Giza, Shelby
Mogi, Muneto
Jaffee, Bruce
Azarian, Sassan
Lack of Involvement of CEP Adducts in TLR Activation and in Angiogenesis
title Lack of Involvement of CEP Adducts in TLR Activation and in Angiogenesis
title_full Lack of Involvement of CEP Adducts in TLR Activation and in Angiogenesis
title_fullStr Lack of Involvement of CEP Adducts in TLR Activation and in Angiogenesis
title_full_unstemmed Lack of Involvement of CEP Adducts in TLR Activation and in Angiogenesis
title_short Lack of Involvement of CEP Adducts in TLR Activation and in Angiogenesis
title_sort lack of involvement of cep adducts in tlr activation and in angiogenesis
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4208838/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25343517
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0111472
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