内大麻素系统
阿那达胺
大麻素受体
核受体
大麻素
受体
生物
炎症
药理学
化学
细胞生物学
生物化学
兴奋剂
免疫学
转录因子
基因
作者
Tom Teichmann,Beatrice Pflüger‐Müller,Virna Margarita Martín Giménez,Fiona Sailer,Henrik Dirks,Simonida Zehr,Timothy Warwick,Felix E. B. Brettner,Paola Munoz‐Tello,Andreas Zimmer,Irmgard Tegeder,Dominique Thomas,Robert Gurke,Stefan Günther,Jan Heering,Ewgenij Proschak,Gerd Geißlinger,Iris‐S. Bibli,Dagmar Meyer zu Heringdorf,Walter Manucha
摘要
Background and purpose Endocannabinoids are lipid mediators, which elicit complex biological effects that extend beyond the central nervous system. Tissue concentrations of endocannabinoids increase in atherosclerosis, and for the endocannabinoid N‐arachidonoyl‐ethanolamine (anandamide, AEA), this has been linked to an anti‐inflammatory function. In this study, we set out to determine the anti‐inflammatory mechanism of action of AEA, specifically focusing on vascular smooth muscle cells. Experimental approach RNA‐sequencing, RT‐qPCR, LC‐MS/MS, NanoBit, ChIP, microscale thermophoresis, NMR structural footprinting, Gal4 reporter gene assays and loss of function approaches in cell and ex vivo organ culture were used. Key results AEA pretreatment attenuated the cytokine‐mediated induction of inflammatory gene expression such as CCL2. This effect was also observed in preparations obtained from cannabinoid receptor knockout mice and after pertussis toxin treatment. The anti‐inflammatory effect of AEA required preincubation, suggesting an effect through gene induction. AEA increased the expression of the nuclear receptors NR4A1 and NR4A2. Knockdown and knockout of these receptors blocked the AEA‐mediated anti‐inflammatory effect in cell culture and aortic organ culture, respectively. Conversely, NR4A agonists (CsnB, C‐DIM12) attenuated inflammatory gene expression. AEA binds to NR4A, and mutations in NR4A attenuated this effect. The interaction of AEA with NR4A caused recruitment of the nuclear corepressor NCoR1 to the CCL2 promoter, resulting in gene suppression. Conclusion and implications By binding to NR4A, AEA elicits an anti‐inflammatory response in vascular smooth muscle cells. NR4A‐binding by AEA analogues may represent novel anti‐inflammatory agents.
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