1. Academic Validation
  2. Identification of HDAC inhibitors as neutrophil recruitment modulators in zebrafish using a chemical library screen

Identification of HDAC inhibitors as neutrophil recruitment modulators in zebrafish using a chemical library screen

  • Dis Model Mech. 2023 Sep 20;dmm.050056. doi: 10.1242/dmm.050056.
Sijia Fan 1 Jinlong Jiang 1 Huan Zhang 1 Cuihong Wang 1 Shang Kong 2 Tingting Zhao 2 Ling Meng 1 Yang Liu 1 Jingjing Qin 1 Xiuqin Rong 1 Zhenting He 1 Qinke He 1 Ke He 1 Ketong Chen 1 Ling Lei 1 Xinyu Hai 1 Hong Nie 2 Chunguang Ren 1
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 Laboratory of Developmental Biology, Department of Cell Biology and Genetics, School of Basic Medical Sciences, Chongqing Medical University, Chongqing, China.
  • 2 International Cooperative Laboratory of Traditional Chinese Medicine Modernization and Innovative Drug Development of Chinese Ministry of Education (MOE) & Guangdong Province Key Laboratory of Pharmacodynamic Constituents of TCM and New Drugs Research, College of Pharmacy, Jinan University, Guangzhou, China.
Abstract

Tissue injury-induced neutrophil recruitment is a prerequisite for the initiation and amplification of inflammatory responses. Although multiple proteases and post-translational modification (PTM) enzymes regulate leukocyte recruitment, an unbiased functional screen of those enzymes regulating inflammatory leukocyte recruitment has yet to be undertaken. Here, using a zebrafish tail fin amputation (TFA) model to screen a chemical library consisting of 295 compounds that target proteases and PTM enzymes, we identified multiple histone deacetylase (HDAC) inhibitors that modulate inflammatory neutrophil recruitment. AR-42, a pan-HDAC inhibitor, was shown to inhibit neutrophil recruitment in three different zebrafish sterile tissue injury models: TFA, copper-induced neuromasts damage (CIND), and mechanical otic vesicle injury (MOVI), and a sterile murine peritonitis model. RNA sequencing analysis of AR-42-treated fish embryos revealed downregulation of neutrophil-associated cytokines/chemokines, and exogenous supplementation with recombinant human IL-1β and CXCL8 partially restored the defective neutrophil recruitment in AR-42-treated MOVI model fish embryos. We thus demonstrate that AR-42 non-cell autonomously modulates neutrophil recruitment by suppressing transcriptional expression of cytokines/chemokines, thereby identifying AR-42 as a promising anti-inflammatory drug for treating sterile tissue injury-associated diseases.

Keywords

AR-42; Cell Migration; HDAC; Neutrophil; Zebrafish.

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