The Journal of pathology
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The Journal of pathology · Aug 2012
Tumour suppressor Fus1 provides a molecular link between inflammatory response and mitochondrial homeostasis.
Fus1, encoded by a 3p21.3 tumour suppressor gene, is down-regulated, mutated or lost in the majority of inflammatory thoracic malignancies. The mitochondrial localization of Fus1 stimulated us to investigate how Fus1 modulates inflammatory response and mitochondrial function in a mouse model of asbestos-induced peritoneal inflammation. Asbestos treatment resulted in a decreased Fus1 expression in wild-type (WT) peritoneal immune cells, suggesting that asbestos exposure may compromise the Fus1-mediated inflammatory response. ⋯ Moreover, Fus1(-/-) mice demonstrated altered dynamics of pro- and anti-inflammatory cytokine expression, such as IFNγ, TNFα, IL-1A, IL-1B and IL-10. 'Late' response cytokine Ccl5 was persistently under-expressed in Fus1(-/-) immune cells at both basal and asbestos-activated states. We observed an asbestos-related difference in the size of CD3(+) CD4(-) CD8(-) DN T cell subset that was expanded four-fold in Fus1(-/-) mice. Finally, we demonstrated Fus1-dependent basal and asbestos-induced changes in major mitochondrial parameters (ROS production, mitochondrial potential and UCP2 expression) in Fus1(-/-) immune cells and in Fus1-depleted cancer cells, thus supporting our hypothesis that Fus1 establishes its immune- and tumour-suppressive activities via regulation of mitochondrial homeostasis.