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- Title
Deficiency of inflammation‐sensing protein neuropilin‐2 in myeloid‐derived macrophages exacerbates colitis via NF‐κB activation.
- Authors
Li, Tong; Ran, Jingjing; Miao, Zhiyong; Yang, Min; Mou, Dachao; Jiang, Yunhan; Xu, Xiaoqiu; Xie, Qibing; Jin, Ke
- Abstract
Neuropilin‐2 (NRP2) is a multifunctional protein engaged in the regulation of angiogenesis, lymphangiogenesis, axon guidance, and tumor metastasis, but its function in colitis remains unclear. Here, we found that NRP2 was an inflammation‐sensing protein rapidly and dramatically induced in myeloid cells, especially in macrophages, under inflammatory contexts. NRP2 deficiency in myeloid cells exacerbated dextran sulfate sodium salt‐induced experimental colitis by promoting polarization of M1 macrophages and colon injury. Mechanistically, NRP2 could be induced via NF‐κB activation by TNF‐α in macrophages, but exerted an inhibitory effect on NF‐κB signaling, forming a negative feedback loop with NF‐κB to sense and alleviate inflammation. Deletion of NRP2 in macrophages broke this negative feedback circuit, leading to NF‐κB overactivation, inflammatory exacerbation, and more severe colitis. Collectively, these findings reveal inflammation restriction as a role for NRP2 in macrophages under inflammation contexts and suggest that NRP2 in macrophages may relieve inflammation in inflammatory bowel disease. © 2023 The Pathological Society of Great Britain and Ireland.
- Subjects
LYMPHATIC metastasis; INFLAMMATORY bowel diseases; COLITIS; PROTEIN deficiency; MACROPHAGES; MYELOID cells
- Publication
Journal of Pathology, 2024, Vol 262, Issue 2, p175
- ISSN
0022-3417
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1002/path.6221