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KPV

Lys-Pro-Val, α-MSH (11-13)

Quick Stats
Studies 104
Trials 57
Score 1
2019 pubmed 26 citations

Pregnane X Receptor Activation Triggers Rapid ATP Release in Primed Macrophages That Mediates NLRP3 Inflammasome Activation.

Hudson. Grace G; Flannigan. Kyle L KL; Venu. Vivek Krishna Pulakazhi VKP; Alston. Laurie L; Sandall. Christina F CF; MacDonald. Justin A JA; Muruve. Daniel A DA; Chang. Thomas K H TKH; Mani. Sridhar S; Hirota. Simon A SA

Key Findings

  • PXR activation in primed macrophages triggers rapid ATP release.
  • The released ATP activates P2X7 receptors, leading to NLRP3 inflammasome activation and IL-1β release.
  • The process depends on pannexin-1 channels and Src-family kinase activity.

Practical Outcomes

  • For most biohackers, this study offers limited direct guidance. It suggests that substances that strongly activate PXR could unintentionally promote inflammatory responses via ATP release, so caution may be warranted when using potent PXR agonists or certain xenobiotics.

Summary

Activating the pregnane X receptor (PXR) in certain immune cells makes them quickly release ATP, which then turns on a protein complex (NLRP3 inflammasome) that drives inflammation. This chain of events involves several other proteins, like P2X7 receptors and pannexin-1 channels, and can be blocked by inhibiting Src-family kinases.

Abstract

The pregnane X receptor (PXR) is a ligand-activated nuclear receptor that acts as a xenobiotic sensor, responding to compounds of foreign origin, including pharmaceutical compounds, environmental contaminants, and natural products, to induce transcriptional events that regulate drug detoxification and efflux pathways. As such, the PXR is thought to play a key role in protecting the host from xenobiotic exposure. More recently, the PXR has been reported to regulate the expression of innate immune receptors in the intestine and modulate inflammasome activation in the vasculature. In the current study, we report that activation of the PXR in primed macrophages triggers caspase-1 activation and interleukin-1<i>&#x3b2;</i> release. Mechanistically, we show that this response is nucleotide-binding oligomerization domain, leucine-rich repeat, and pyrin domain-containing 3-dependent and is driven by the rapid efflux of ATP and P2X purinoceptor 7 activation following PXR stimulation, an event that involves pannexin-1 gating, and is sensitive to inhibition of Src-family kinases. Our findings identify a mechanism whereby the PXR drives innate immune signaling, providing a potential link between xenobiotic exposure and the induction of innate inflammatory responses.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2019

Date

2019-04-19T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1124/jpet.118.255679

Citations

26

References

73