1. Academic Validation
  2. Inhibition of arginase activity enhances inflammation in mice with allergic airway disease, in association with increases in protein S-nitrosylation and tyrosine nitration

Inhibition of arginase activity enhances inflammation in mice with allergic airway disease, in association with increases in protein S-nitrosylation and tyrosine nitration

  • J Immunol. 2008 Sep 15;181(6):4255-64. doi: 10.4049/jimmunol.181.6.4255.
Karina Ckless 1 Anniek Lampert Jessica Reiss David Kasahara Matthew E Poynter Charles G Irvin Lennart K A Lundblad Ryan Norton Albert van der Vliet Yvonne M W Janssen-Heininger
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Department of Pathology, University of Vermont, Burlington, VT 05405, USA.
Abstract

Pulmonary inflammation in asthma is orchestrated by the activity of NF-kappaB. NO and NO Synthase (NOS) activity are important modulators of inflammation. The availability of the NOS substrate, l-arginine, is one of the mechanisms that controls the activity of NOS. Arginase also uses l-arginine as its substrate, and arginase-1 expression is highly induced in a murine model of asthma. Because we have previously described that Arginase affects NOx content and interferes with the activation of NF-kappaB in lung epithelial cells, the goal of this study was to investigate the impact of Arginase inhibition on the bioavailability of NO and the implications for NF-kappaB activation and inflammation in a mouse model of allergic airway disease. Administration of the Arginase Inhibitor BEC (S-(2-boronoethyl)-l-cysteine) decreased Arginase activity and caused alterations in NO homeostasis, which were reflected by increases in S-nitrosylated and nitrated proteins in the lungs from inflamed mice. In contrast to our expectations, BEC enhanced perivascular and peribronchiolar lung inflammation, mucus metaplasia, NF-kappaB DNA binding, and mRNA expression of the NF-kappaB-driven chemokine genes CCL20 and KC, and lead to further increases in airways hyperresponsiveness. These results suggest that inhibition of Arginase activity enhanced a variety of parameters relevant to allergic airways disease, possibly by altering NO homeostasis.

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