2013-10-29
Unbiased screening of marine sponge extracts for anti-inflammatory agents combined with chemical genomics identifies girolline as an inhibitor of protein synthesis
Publication
Publication
ACS Chemical Biology , Volume 9 - Issue 1 p. 247- 257
Toll-like receptors (TLRs) play a critical role in innate immunity, but activation of TLR signaling pathways is also associated with many harmful inflammatory diseases. Identification of novel anti-inflammatory molecules targeting TLR signaling pathways is central to the development of new treatment approaches for acute and chronic inflammation. We performed high-throughput screening from crude marine sponge extracts on TLR5 signaling and identified girolline. We demonstrated that girolline inhibits signaling through both MyD88-dependent and -independent TLRs (i.e., TLR2, 3, 4, 5, and 7) and reduces cytokine (IL-6 and IL-8) production in human peripheral blood mononuclear cells and macrophages. Using a chemical genomics approach, we identified Elongation Factor 2 as the molecular target of girolline, which inhibits protein synthesis at the elongation step. Together these data identify the sponge natural product girolline as a potential anti-inflammatory agent acting through inhibition of protein synthesis.
| Additional Metadata | |
|---|---|
| , , , , | |
| doi.org/10.1021/cb400740c | |
| ACS Chemical Biology | |
| Organisation | Staff publications |
|
Fung, Shan-Yu, Sofiyev, Vladimir, Schneiderman, Julia, Hirschfeld, Aaron F., Victor, Rachel E., Woods, Kate, … Turvey, Stuart E. (2013). Unbiased screening of marine sponge extracts for anti-inflammatory agents combined with chemical genomics identifies girolline as an inhibitor of protein synthesis. ACS Chemical Biology, 9(1), 247–257. doi:10.1021/cb400740c |
|