|
Several
members of the Sherr Laboratory team investigate how
polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH) induce cell suicide
(a poptosis). Recent studies have demonstrated
that a number of common environmental pollutants (e.g.,
aromatic hydrocarbons, dioxins, PCBs) compromise the
immune system as well as induce cancer. Like immunosuppressive
therapeutics (e.g., steroids), these compounds induce
thymic atrophy, decrease resistance to infectious agents
and tumors, impair B cell antibody responses, decrease
cytotoxic T cell activity, inhibit natural killer activity
and decrease cytokine production. Immunotoxicity mediated
by extremely low concentrations of environmental pollutants
is regulated by a cytoplasmic aryl hydrocarbon receptor
(AhR), which, when bound by hydrocarbons, dioxins, or
PCBs, translocates to the nucleus, binds specific gene
promoter DNA sequences, and induces transcription of
a number of genes including proto-oncogenes and cytokine
genes. Members of the Sherr Laboratory have demonstrated
that the developing immune system is particularly sensitive
to AhR ligands. That is, low doses of PAH induce bone
marrow stromal cells to elaborate a death factor which
induces programmed cell death/apoptosis in neighboring
pre-B lymphocytes. This observation implies that environmental
chemicals can compromise immune system development and
that the AhR may play a role in B lymphocyte development
through apoptosis regulation.
Much of the
"A" team has been unraveling the network of intracellular
signals that occur within bone marrow B cells following
exposure to PAH and resulting in cell suicide. Jessica
Emberley, a predoctoral student in the Boston University
Immunology Training Program, has developed elegant systems
for mapping this pathway. Extending the work of Heui-Young
Ryu, DSc, formerly of the Sherr Laboratory, Emberley
has demonstrated that the B cell death pathway is not
mediated by TNF receptor family-mediated signaling but
likely begins with activation of several caspases. She
also has demonstrated that multiple interacting apoptosis
pathways involving caspases, mitochondria, and apoptosis-promoting
genes contribute to environmental chemical-induced bone
marrow B cell apoptosis. Some of this apoptosis work
has been performed in collaboration with the laboratory
of Dr. Jennifer Schlezinger, a Research Assistant Professor
in the Department of Environmental Health who studies
environmental phthaltes and other activators of a receptor
called PPAR which induce rapid bone marrow B cell death.
These studies represent an important step forward in
the clarification of how environmental chemicals dysregulate
pre-B cell development.
Several additional
cell subsets within lymphoid organs are targeted by
AhR-binding chemicals. For example, Lenka Pospisil Allan,
a predoctoral student in the Boston University Immunology
Training Program, has demonstrated that bone marrow
stromal cells respond to PAH exposure by delivering
apoptosis signals to bone marrow B cells and to other
hematopoetic cells. Allan has employed protein chemistry
techniques to partially characterize the "death factor"
responsible for its production. She also has used AhR-defective
mice and gene microarrays to define AhR-regulated stromal
cell genes. In addition, Allan has recently demonstrated
that mature human B cells may be particularly sensitive
to environmental PAHs because of their propensity to
up-regulate the AhR after immune activation.
The work of
the "A" team is supported by grants from the National
Institute of Environmental Health and the Superfund
Basic Science Research Program.
|