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Ponnappan U, Yull FE, Soderberg
LS.
Department of Microbiology and Immunology, College
of Medicine, University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, 4301 W.
Markham, Little Rock, AR 72205, USA.
We previously reported that inhaled isobutyl nitrite
inhibited macrophage tumoricidal activity by inhibiting inducible
nitric oxide (NO) production. In the present study, a much shorter
inhalant exposure regimen (five daily exposures) inhibited inducible
NO and the NO synthase (NOS2). One of the ways in which NO and NOS2
are regulated is by ubiquitin-dependent NOS2 degradation. Immunoprecipitated
NOS2 showed increased poly-ubiquitination, following exposure to
the inhalant. In addition, Western blots of macrophage nuclear extracts
for the NFkappaB subunit, p65, showed that exposure to the inhalant
inhibited NFkappaB signaling, necessary for induction of NOS2. The
inhalant blocked phosphorylation of the NFkappaB inhibitor, IkappaBalpha.
The inhibition of NFkappaB signaling following inhalant exposure
was confirmed using mice transgenic for the kappaB-dependent promoter
of the HIV 5' LTR linked to luciferase. The data suggested that
inhalant exposure likely inhibited macrophage NO production by blocking
NFkappaB-mediated activation signaling and promoting poly ubiquitination
of NOS2.
PMID: 15222982 [PubMed - in process]
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