Blockade of store-operated calcium entry by BTP2 preserves anti-inflammatory gene expression in human peripheral blood mononuclear cells.
Academic Article
Overview
abstract
Store-operated calcium entry (SOCE) is essential for cellular signaling. Earlier studies of the pyrazole derivative BTP2, an efficient inhibitor SOCE, identified that SOCE blockade suppresses proinflammatory gene expression. The impact of SOCE blockade on gene expression at the whole transcriptome level, however, is unknown. To fill this gap, we performed RNA sequencing (RNA-seq) and investigated at the whole transcriptome level the effect of BTP2 on gene expression in human peripheral blood mononuclear cells signaled with phytohemagglutinin. Our global gene expression analysis identified that SOCE blockade spares activation-induced expression of anti-inflammatory genes (e.g., IL10, TGFB1, FOXP3, and CTLA4) whereas the induced expression of proinflammatory genes such as IFNG and cytopathic genes such as GZMB are inhibited. We validated the differential expression of immunoregulatory genes identified by RNA-seq using preamplification-enhanced RT-qPCR assays. Because IL-2/IL2RA interaction is essential for T cell clonal expansion, we investigated and confirmed that BTP2 inhibits IL2RA expression at the protein level using multiparameter flow cytometry. Our elucidation that SOCE blockade spares activation-induced expression of anti-inflammatory genes while blocking pro-inflammatory gene expression suggests that SOCE blockers may represent a novel class of immunoregulatory drugs of value for treating autoimmune disease states and organ transplantation.