[PDF][PDF] Responses to amyloids of microbial and host origin are mediated through toll-like receptor 2

Ç Tükel, RP Wilson, JH Nishimori, M Pezeshki… - Cell host & …, 2009 - cell.com
Ç Tükel, RP Wilson, JH Nishimori, M Pezeshki, BA Chromy, AJ Bäumler
Cell host & microbe, 2009cell.com
Curli fibrils are proteinaceous bacterial structures formed by amyloid fibrils composed of the
major curli subunit CsgA. Like β-amyloid 1–42, which is associated with brain inflammation
and Alzheimer's disease, curli fibrils have been implicated in the induction of host
inflammatory responses. However, the underlying mechanisms of amyloid-induced
inflammation are not fully understood. In a mouse sepsis model, we show that curli fibrils
contributed to Nos2 expression, a hallmark of inflammation, by stimulating Toll-like receptor …
Summary
Curli fibrils are proteinaceous bacterial structures formed by amyloid fibrils composed of the major curli subunit CsgA. Like β-amyloid 1–42, which is associated with brain inflammation and Alzheimer's disease, curli fibrils have been implicated in the induction of host inflammatory responses. However, the underlying mechanisms of amyloid-induced inflammation are not fully understood. In a mouse sepsis model, we show that curli fibrils contributed to Nos2 expression, a hallmark of inflammation, by stimulating Toll-like receptor (TLR) 2. The TLR2 agonist activity was reduced by an amyloidogenicity-lowering amino acid substitution (N122A) in CsgA. Amyloid-forming synthetic peptides corresponding to β-amyloid 1–42 or CsgA 111–151 stimulated Nos2 production in macrophages and microglia cells through a TLR2-dependent mechanism. This activity was abrogated when an N122A substitution was introduced into the synthetic CsgA peptide. The induction of TLR2-mediated responses by bacterial and eukaryotic amyloids may explain the inflammation associated with amyloids and the resulting pathologies.
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