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Oxford University Press, Nucleic Acids Research, 20(42), p. 12555-12569, 2014

DOI: 10.1093/nar/gku1033

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Resveratrol post-transcriptionally regulates pro-inflammatory gene expression via regulation of KSRP RNA binding activity

Journal article published in 2014 by University Hospital Goethe University Frankfurt pharmazentrum frankfurt/ZAFES, Franziska Bollmann, Johannes Gutenberg-University Medical Center Department of Pharmacology, Julia Art, Fakultat fur Lebenswissenschaften University of Vienna Department fur Pharmazeutische Chemie, University Tuebingen Pharmaceutical Institute, Jenny Henke, Institute of Pharmacy Friedrich-Schiller-University Jena Chair of Pharmaceutical/Medicinal Chemistry, Katharina Schrick, Johannes Gutenberg-University Medical Center Institute of Immunology, Verena Besche, Thomas Erker, Matthias Bros, L. Hardle, Bettina Mönch and other authors.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Abstract

Resveratrol shows beneficial effects in inflammation-based diseases like cancer, cardiovascular and chronic inflammatory diseases. Therefore, the molecular mechanisms of the anti-inflammatory resveratrol effects deserve more attention. In human epithelial DLD-1 and monocytic Mono Mac 6 cells resveratrol decreased the expression of iNOS, IL-8 and TNF-alpha by reducing mRNA stability without inhibition of the promoter activity. Shown by pharmacological and siRNA-mediated inhibition, the observed effects are SIRT1-independent. Target-fishing and drug responsive target stability experiments showed selective binding of resveratrol to the RNA-binding protein KSRP, a central post-transcriptional regulator of pro-inflammatory gene expression. Knockdown of KSRP expression prevented resveratrol-induced mRNA destabilization in human and murine cells. Resveratrol did not change KSRP expression, but immunoprecipitation experiments indicated that resveratrol reduces the p38 MAPK-related inhibitory KSRP threonine phosphorylation, without blocking p38 MAPK activation or activity. Mutation of the p38 MAPK target site in KSRP blocked the resveratrol effect on pro-inflammatory gene expression. In addition, resveratrol incubation enhanced KSRP-exosome interaction, which is important for mRNA degradation. Finally, resveratrol incubation enhanced its intra-cellular binding to the IL-8, iNOS and TNF-alpha mRNA. Therefore, modulation of KSRP mRNA binding activity and, thereby, enhancement of mRNA degradation seems to be the common denominator of many anti-inflammatory effects of resveratrol.