Dysregulated inflammatory responses are known to impair wound healing in diabetes, but the underlying mechanisms are poorly understood. Here we show that the antimicrobial protein REG3A controls TLR3-mediated inflammation after skin injury. This control is mediated by REG3A-induced SHP-1 protein, and acts selectively on TLR3-activated JNK2. In diabetic mouse skin, hyperglycaemia inhibits the expression of IL-17-induced IL-33 via glucose glycation. The decrease in cutaneous IL-33 reduces REG3A expression in epidermal keratinocytes. The reduction in REG3A is associated with lower levels of SHP-1, which normally inhibits TLR3-induced JNK2 phosphorylation, thereby increasing inflammation in skin wounds. To our knowledge, these findings show for the first time that REG3A can modulate specific cutaneous inflammatory responses and that the decrease in cutaneous REG3A exacerbates inflammation in diabetic skin wounds.
Stress ulceration is a common complication in critically ill patients and can result in significant upper gastrointestinal bleeding associated with a high morbidity and mortality. At present, little is known of the molecular mechanisms underlying the incidence of this type of gastric damage. In the present study, we investigated the temporal activation of the redox-sensitive p38 signaling transduction cascade and its roles in a well-defined experimental model of cold immobilization stress-induced gastric ulceration. Exposure of Sprague-Dawley rats to 6 h of cold immobilization stress led to a rapid activation of p38 in the gastric mucosa at as early as 15 min after stress, and this activation was maximal after 1.5 h of stress and still persisted until the end of stress. Selectively blocking p38 by pretreatment with SB 239063, a potent and selective p38 inhibitor, suppressed the stress-promoted TNF-α, IL-1β, and CINC-1 production and then prevented the subsequent neutrophil infiltration, gastric mucosal epithelial necrosis and apoptosis, and the ulcerative lesions formation. Prior administration of the free radical scavengers, tempol and N-acetyl-l-cysteine, abolished the stress induction of p38 activation and the resulting mucosal inflammation and gastric injury. These results demonstrate that reactive oxygen species-mediated p38 activation plays an essential role in the pathogenesis of stress-induced gastric inflammatory damage in the rat model of cold immobilization stress. Our findings suggested that inhibition of p38 activation might be a potential strategy for the prophylaxis and treatment of stress ulceration.
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