RESEARCH PAPER


MicroRNAs miR-146a/b negatively modulate the senescence-associated inflammatory mediators IL-6 and IL-8

Dipa Bhaumik1, Gary K. Scott1, Shiruyeh Schokrpur1,3, Christopher K. Patil1,2, Arturo V. Orjalo1, Francis Rodier1,2, Gordon J. Lithgow1, and Judith Campisi1,2
1 Buck Institute for Age Research, Novato, CA 94945, USA
2 Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, CA 94720, USA
3 Present Address: University of California at Los Angeles, Los Angeles CA 90095, USA
Running title:
miRNAs regulate inflammatory secretion at senescence
Key words:
miRNA, DNA damage, IL-1α, IL-6, IL-8, inflammation
Received:
03/31/09; accepted: 04/18/09; published on line: 04/21/09
Correspondence:
E-mail:

Abstract

Senescence is a cellular program that irreversibly arrests the proliferation of damaged cells and induces the secretion of the inflammatory mediators IL- 6 and IL-8 which are part of a larger senescence associated secretory phenotype (SASP). We screened quiescent and senescent human fibroblasts for differentially expressed microRNAS (miRNAs) and found that miRNAs 146a and 146b (miR-146a/b) were significantly elevated during senescence. We suggest that delayed miR-146a/b induction might be a compensatory response to restrain inflammation. Indeed, ectopic expression of miR-146a/b in primary human fibroblasts suppressed IL-6 and IL-8 secretion and downregulated IRAK1, a crucial component of the IL-1 receptor signal transduction pathway. Cells undergoing senescence without induction of a robust SASP did not express miR-146a/b. Further, IL-1α neutralizing antibodies abolished both miR-146a/b expression and IL-6 secretion. Our findings expand the biological contexts in which miRNA-146a/b modulates inflammatory responses. They suggest that IL-1 receptor signaling initiates both miR-146a/b upregulation and cytokine secretion, and that miR-146a/b is expressed in response to rising inflammatory cytokine levels as part of a negative feedback loop that restrains excessive SASP activity.