1. Academic Validation
  2. Suppression of endothelial adhesion molecule up-regulation with cyclopentenone prostaglandins is dissociated from IkappaB-alpha kinase inhibition and cell death induction

Suppression of endothelial adhesion molecule up-regulation with cyclopentenone prostaglandins is dissociated from IkappaB-alpha kinase inhibition and cell death induction

  • FASEB J. 2003 Jun;17(9):1099-101. doi: 10.1096/fj.02-0485fje.
Alma Zernecke 1 Wolfgang Erl Line Fraemohs Michael Lietz Christian Weber
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Institut für Prophylaxe der Kreislaufkrankheiten, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München, 80336 München, Germany.
Abstract

The cyclopentenone prostaglandins (cPG) 15-deoxy-Delta12,14-prostaglandin J2 (dPGJ2) and PGA1 can inhibit multiple steps in nuclear factor (NF)-kappaB signaling and can induce cell death. Here we characterized the effects of dPGJ2 and PGA1 on the inflammatory induction of endothelial cell adhesion molecules (CAM). Pretreatment of endothelial cells with dPGJ2 or PGA1 at low concentrations dose dependently inhibited the up-regulation of CAM expression and monocyte arrest by tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha but not expression of inhibitor of Apoptosis proteins. Only at high concentrations, cPG enhanced TNF-alpha-induced cell death and inhibited TNF-alpha-induced IkappaB-alpha kinase (IKK) activation, IkappaB-alpha degradation, and NF-kappaB/p65 translocation, while promoting AP-1/c-jun phosphorylation. Expression of an IKK-beta mutant (C179A) resistant to interaction with cPG impaired cell death induction but not inhibition of CAM up-regulation by cPG. Gel shift and reporter gene analysis revealed that cPG at low concentrations directly impaired DNA binding of NF-kappaB and NF-kappaB-dependent transactivation. The synthetic analogs dPGA1 or dPGA2 were ineffective, indicating structural specificity of cPG. Thus, the suppression of endothelial CAM up-regulation with cPG is dissociated from cell death sensitization and IKK inhibition above threshold concentrations and related to interference with NF-kappaB binding. Our findings define distinct mechanisms for anti-inflammatory and proapoptotic effects of cPG in endothelial cells.

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