journal articleresearch article
The glucocorticoid receptor in inflammatory processes : transrepression is not enough
Abstract
Glucocorticoids (GCs) are the most commonly used anti-inflammatory agents to treat inflammatory and immune diseases. However, steroid therapies are accompanied by severe side-effects during long-term treatment. The dogma that transrepression of genes, by tethering of the glucocorticoid receptor (GR) to DNA-bound pro-inflammatory transcription factors, is the main anti-inflammatory mechanism, is now challenged. Recent discoveries using conditional GR mutant mice and genomic approaches reveal that transactivation of anti-inflammatory acting genes is essential to suppress many inflammatory disease models. This novel view radically changes the concept to design selective acting GR ligands with a reduced side-effect profile- journalArticle
- info:eu-repo/semantics/article
- info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
- Medicine and Health Sciences
- inflammation
- transactivation
- glucocorticoid receptor
- ChIP-Seq
- transgenic mice
- transrepression
- INNATE IMMUNE-RESPONSES
- INDUCED LEUCINE-ZIPPER
- DNA-BINDING
- CHROMATIN ACCESSIBILITY
- ANTIINFLAMMATORY FUNCTIONS
- TRANSCRIPTION FACTORS
- TARGET GENES
- MAP KINASE
- T-CELLS
- KAPPA-B