Coronaviruses (CoVs) are important human pathogens for which no specific treatment is available. Here, we provide evidence that pharmacological reprogramming of ER stress pathways can be exploited to suppress CoV replication. The ER stress inducer thapsigargin efficiently inhibits coronavirus (HCoV-229E, MERS-CoV, SARS-CoV-2) replication in different cell types including primary differentiated human bronchial epithelial cells, (partially) reverses the virus-induced translational shut-down, improves viability of infected cells and counteracts the CoV-mediated downregulation of IRE1α and the ER chaperone BiP. Proteome-wide analyses revealed specific pathways, protein networks and components that likely mediate the thapsigargin-induced antiviral state, including essential (HERPUD1) or novel (UBA6 and ZNF622) factors of ER quality control, and ER-associated protein degradation complexes. Additionally, thapsigargin blocks the CoV-induced selective autophagic flux involving p62/SQSTM1. The data show that thapsigargin hits several central mechanisms required for CoV replication, suggesting that this compound (or derivatives thereof) may be developed into broad-spectrum anti-CoV drugs.
How cytokine‐driven changes in chromatin topology are converted into gene regulatory circuits during inflammation still remains unclear. Here, we show that interleukin (IL)‐1α induces acute and widespread changes in chromatin accessibility via the TAK1 kinase and NF‐κB at regions that are highly enriched for inflammatory disease‐relevant SNPs. Two enhancers in the extended chemokine locus on human chromosome 4 regulate the IL‐1α‐inducible IL8 and CXCL1‐3 genes. Both enhancers engage in dynamic spatial interactions with gene promoters in an IL‐1α/TAK1‐inducible manner. Microdeletions of p65‐binding sites in either of the two enhancers impair NF‐κB recruitment, suppress activation and biallelic transcription of the IL8/CXCL2 genes, and reshuffle higher‐order chromatin interactions as judged by i4C interactome profiles. Notably, these findings support a dominant role of the IL8 “master” enhancer in the regulation of sustained IL‐1α signaling, as well as for IL‐8 and IL‐6 secretion. CRISPR‐guided transactivation of the IL8 locus or cross‐TAD regulation by TNFα‐responsive enhancers in a different model locus supports the existence of complex enhancer hierarchies in response to cytokine stimulation that prime and orchestrate proinflammatory chromatin responses downstream of NF‐κB.
Coronaviruses (CoVs) are important human pathogens for which no specific treatment is available. Here, we provide evidence that pharmacological reprogramming of ER stress pathways can be exploited to suppress CoV replication. We found that the ER stress inducer thapsigargin efficiently inhibits coronavirus (HCoV-229E, MERS-CoV, SARS-CoV-2) replication in different cell types, (partially) restores the virus-induced translational shut-down, and counteracts the CoV-mediated downregulation of IRE1α and the ER chaperone BiP. Proteome-wide data sets revealed specific pathways, protein networks and components that likely mediate the thapsigargin-induced antiviral state, including HERPUD1, an essential factor of ER quality control, and ER-associated protein degradation complexes. The data show that thapsigargin hits a central mechanism required for CoV replication, suggesting that thapsigargin (or derivatives thereof) may be developed into broad-spectrum anti-CoV drugs.One Sentence Summary / Running titleSuppression of coronavirus replication through thapsigargin-regulated ER stress, ERQC / ERAD and metabolic pathways
The frequently occurring heterogeneity of cancer cells and their functional interaction with immune cells in the tumor microenvironment raises the need to study signaling pathways at the single cell level with high precision, sensitivity, and spatial resolution. As aberrant NF-κB activity has been implicated in almost all steps of cancer development, we analyzed the dynamic regulation and activation status of the canonical NF-κB pathway in control and IL-1α-stimulated individual cells using proximity ligation assays (PLAs). These systematic experiments allowed the visualization of the dynamic dissociation and re-formation of endogenous p65/IκBα complexes and the nuclear translocation of NF-κB p50/p65 dimers. PLA combined with immunostaining for p65 or with NFKBIA single molecule mRNA-FISH facilitated the analysis of (i) further levels of the NF-κB pathway, (i) its functionality for downstream gene expression, and (iii) the heterogeneity of the NF-κB response in individual cells. PLA also revealed the interaction between NF-κB p65 and the P-body component DCP1a, a new p65 interactor that contributes to efficient p65 NF-κB nuclear translocation. In summary, these data show that PLA technology faithfully mirrored all aspects of dynamic NF-κB regulation, thus allowing molecular diagnostics of this key pathway at the single cell level which will be required for future precision medicine.
The NF-κB signaling system plays an important regulatory role in the control of many biological processes. The activities of NF-κB signaling networks and the expression of their target genes are frequently elevated in pathophysiological situations including inflammation, infection, and cancer. In these conditions, the outcome of NF-κB activity can vary according to (i) differential activation states, (ii) the pattern of genomic recruitment of the NF-κB subunits, and (iii) cellular heterogeneity. Additionally, the cytosolic NF-κB activation steps leading to the liberation of DNA-binding dimers need to be distinguished from the less understood nuclear pathways that are ultimately responsible for NF-κB target gene specificity. This raises the need to more precisely determine the NF-κB activation status not only for the purpose of basic research, but also in (future) clinical applications. Here we review a compendium of different methods that have been developed to assess the NF-κB activation status in vitro and in vivo. We also discuss recent advances that allow the assessment of several NF-κB features simultaneously at the single cell level.
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