The involvement of L-gamma-glutamyl-L-cysteinyl-glycine (glutathione/GSH) in the mechanism of redox signaling mediating MAPK(p38)-dependent regulation of pro-inflammatory cytokine production.

Journal: Biochemical Pharmacology
Published:
Abstract

Redox regulation of mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK(p38))-mediated pro-inflammatory cytokine production is not well characterized in the alveolar epithelium. It was hypothesized that the involvement of the MAPK(p38) pathway in regulating lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-induced tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha and interleukin-6 secretion is redox-sensitive and affected by NAC, an antioxidant and a precursor of glutathione, and L-buthionine-(S,R)-sulfoximine, an irreversible inhibitor of gamma-glutamylcysteine synthetase, the rate-limiting enzyme in GSH biosynthesis. Exposure of fetal alveolar type II epithelial cells to Escherichia coli-derived LPS induced, in a time-dependent manner, the phosphorylation/activation of MAPK(p38) (peak at 15min). In addition, LPS up-regulated the phosphorylation of MAPK(p38) in a dose-dependent manner. The effect of LPS on the MAPK(p38) pathway was associated with the activation of MAPK-activated protein kinase, which phosphorylated the small 27kDa heat-shock protein (Hsp27). LPS induced the phosphorylation of Hsp27 in a time- and dose-dependent manner. Selective blockage of the MAPK(p38) pathway by a pyridinyl-imidazole (SB-203580) abrogated LPS-induced release of TNF-alpha and IL-6. Pre-treatment with NAC reduced LPS-mediated secretion of TNF-alpha and IL-6. Incubation of cells with NAC induced intracellular accumulation of GSH, but reduced the concentration of GSSG. On the other hand, pre-treatment with BSO augmented LPS-mediated secretion of TNF-alpha and IL-6. In addition, BSO induced intracellular accumulation of GSSG, but reduced the concentration of GSH. Whereas NAC blocked the phosphorylation/activation of MAPK(p38), BSO amplified the LPS-mediated effect on MAPK(p38). These results indicated that intracellular redox signaling plays an important role in regulating LPS-induced activation of the MAPK(p38) pathway and MAPK(p38)-mediated regulation of LPS-dependent inflammatory cytokine production in the alveolar epithelium.

Authors
John Haddad