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Recent Articles
Qiao Y, Prabhakar S, Coccia EM, Weiden M, Canova A, Giacomini E,
Pine R.
Host defense responses to infection by Mycobacterium tuberculosis.
Induction of IRF-1 and a serine protease inhibitor.
J Biol Chem 2002 Jun 21;277(25):22377-85
PMID: 11948194
Alveolar macrophages and newly recruited monocytes are targets of
infection by Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Therefore, we examined
the expression of interferon regulatory factor 1 (IRF-1), which
plays an important role in host defense against M. tuberculosis,
in undifferentiated and differentiated cells. Infection induced
IRF-1 in both. IRF-1 from undifferentiated, uninfected monocytic
cell lines was modified during extraction to produce specific species
that were apparently smaller than intact IRF-1. After infection
by M. tuberculosis or differentiation, intact IRF-1 was recovered.
Subcellular fractions were assayed for the ability to modify IRF-1
or inhibit its modification. A serine protease on the cytoplasmic
surface of an organelle or vesicle in the "lysosomal/mitochondrial"
fraction from undifferentiated cells was responsible for the modification
of IRF-1. Thus, the simplest explanation of the modification is
cleavage of IRF-1 by the serine protease. Recovery of intact IRF-1
correlated with induction of a serine protease inhibitor that was
able to significantly reduce the modification of IRF-1. The inhibitor
was present in the cytoplasm of M. tuberculosis-infected or -differentiated
cells. It is likely that induction of both IRF-1 and the serine
protease inhibitor in response to infection by M. tuberculosis represent
host defense mechanisms.

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