The isoenzyme of glutaminyl cyclase is an important regulator of monocyte infiltration under inflamm...
The isoenzyme of glutaminyl cyclase is an important regulator of monocyte infiltration under inflammatory conditions
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Full title
Author / Creator
Cynis, Holger , Hoffmann, Torsten , Friedrich, Daniel , Kehlen, Astrid , Gans, Kathrin , Kleinschmidt, Martin , Rahfeld, Jens‐Ulrich , Wolf, Raik , Wermann, Michael , Stephan, Anett , Haegele, Monique , Sedlmeier, Reinhard , Graubner, Sigrid , Jagla, Wolfgang , Müller, Anke , Eichentopf, Rico , Heiser, Ulrich , Seifert, Franziska , Quax, Paul H. A. , de Vries, Margreet R. , Hesse, Isabel , Trautwein, Daniela , Wollert, Ulrich , Berg, Sabine , Freyse, Ernst‐Joachim , Schilling, Stephan and Demuth, Hans‐Ulrich
Publisher
London: Nature Publishing Group UK
Journal title
Language
English
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Publication information
Publisher
London: Nature Publishing Group UK
Subjects
More information
Scope and Contents
Contents
Acute and chronic inflammatory disorders are characterized by detrimental cytokine and chemokine expression. Frequently, the chemotactic activity of cytokines depends on a modified N‐terminus of the polypeptide. Among those, the N‐terminus of monocyte chemoattractant protein 1 (CCL2 and MCP‐1) is modified to a pyroglutamate (pE‐) residue protecting against degradation
in vivo
. Here, we show that the N‐terminal pE‐formation depends on glutaminyl cyclase activity. The pE‐residue increases stability against N‐terminal degradation by aminopeptidases and improves receptor activation and signal transduction
in vitro
. Genetic ablation of the glutaminyl cyclase iso‐enzymes QC (
QPCT
) or isoQC (
QPCTL
) revealed a major role of isoQC for pE
1
‐CCL2 formation and monocyte infiltration. Consistently, administration of QC‐inhibitors in inflammatory models, such as thioglycollate‐induced peritonitis reduced monocyte infiltration. The pharmacologic efficacy of QC/isoQC‐inhibition was assessed in accelerated atherosclerosis in ApoE3*Leiden mice, showing attenuated atherosclerotic pathology following chronic oral treatment. Current strategies targeting CCL2 are mainly based on antibodies or spiegelmers. The application of small, orally available inhibitors of glutaminyl cyclases represents an alternative therapeutic strategy to treat CCL2‐driven disorders such as atherosclerosis/restenosis and fibrosis.
→See accompanying article
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/emmm.201100161...
Alternative Titles
Full title
The isoenzyme of glutaminyl cyclase is an important regulator of monocyte infiltration under inflammatory conditions
Authors, Artists and Contributors
Author / Creator
Hoffmann, Torsten
Friedrich, Daniel
Kehlen, Astrid
Gans, Kathrin
Kleinschmidt, Martin
Rahfeld, Jens‐Ulrich
Wolf, Raik
Wermann, Michael
Stephan, Anett
Haegele, Monique
Sedlmeier, Reinhard
Graubner, Sigrid
Jagla, Wolfgang
Müller, Anke
Eichentopf, Rico
Heiser, Ulrich
Seifert, Franziska
Quax, Paul H. A.
de Vries, Margreet R.
Hesse, Isabel
Trautwein, Daniela
Wollert, Ulrich
Berg, Sabine
Freyse, Ernst‐Joachim
Schilling, Stephan
Demuth, Hans‐Ulrich
Identifiers
Primary Identifiers
Record Identifier
TN_cdi_pubmedcentral_primary_oai_pubmedcentral_nih_gov_3377097
Permalink
https://devfeature-collection.sl.nsw.gov.au/record/TN_cdi_pubmedcentral_primary_oai_pubmedcentral_nih_gov_3377097
Other Identifiers
ISSN
1757-4676
E-ISSN
1757-4684
DOI
10.1002/emmm.201100158