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C/EBPε mediates nicotinamide-enhanced clearance of Staphylococcus aureus in mice
Pierre Kyme, … , H. Phillip Koeffler, George Y. Liu
Pierre Kyme, … , H. Phillip Koeffler, George Y. Liu
Published August 27, 2012
Citation Information: J Clin Invest. 2012;122(9):3316-3329. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI62070.
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Research Article Infectious disease Article has an altmetric score of 40

C/EBPε mediates nicotinamide-enhanced clearance of Staphylococcus aureus in mice

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Abstract

The myeloid-specific transcription factor, CCAAT/enhancer-binding protein ε (C/EBPε) is a critical mediator of myelopoiesis. Mutation of this gene is responsible for neutrophil-specific granule deficiency in humans, a condition that confers susceptibility to Staphylococcus aureus infection. We found that C/EBPε-deficient mice are severely affected by infection with S. aureus, and C/EBPε deficiency in neutrophils contributes to the infectious phenotype. Conversely, exposure to the epigenetic modulator nicotinamide (vitamin B3) increased expression of C/EBPε in WT myeloid cells. Further, nicotinamide increased the activity of C/EBPε and select downstream antimicrobial targets, particularly in neutrophils. In a systemic murine infection model as well as in murine and human peripheral blood, nicotinamide enhanced killing of S. aureus by up to 1,000 fold but had no effect when administered to either C/EBPε-deficient mice or mice depleted of neutrophils. Nicotinamide was efficacious in both prophylactic and therapeutic settings. Our findings suggest that C/EBPε is an important target to boost killing of bacteria by the innate immune system.

Authors

Pierre Kyme, Nils H. Thoennissen, Ching Wen Tseng, Gabriela B. Thoennissen, Andrea J. Wolf, Kenichi Shimada, Utz O. Krug, Kunik Lee, Carsten Müller-Tidow, Wolfgang E. Berdel, W. David Hardy, Adrian F. Gombart, H. Phillip Koeffler, George Y. Liu

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Figure 2

Induced overexpression of C/EBPε promotes killing of S. aureus in vitro.

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Induced overexpression of C/EBPε promotes killing of S. aureus in vitro....
The promonocytic cell line U937 was stably transfected with either pMTε or vector control (pMT), differentiated using PMA, and treated with or without zinc (100 εM). The PMA-derived U937 cells were infected with S. aureus (Pig1) at multiple different MOI (bacteria/macrophage) for 24 hours; data are mean ± SEM. Western blot revealed a 6.5-fold (6.5x) increase in C/EBPε protein expression in lysates from the infected zinc-treated cells carrying pMTε, compared with that of the controls.

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ISSN: 0021-9738 (print), 1558-8238 (online)

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