Effects of hypoxia on monocyte inflammatory mediator production - Dissociation between changes in cyclooxygenase-2 expression and eicosanoid synthesis

Date

2003

Authors

Demasi, M.
Cleland, L.
Cook-Johnson, R.
Caughey, G.
James, M.

Editors

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Type:

Journal article

Citation

Journal of Biological Chemistry, 2003; 278(40):38607-38616

Statement of Responsibility

Demasi, Maryanne ; Cleland, Leslie G ; Cook-johnson, Rebecca J ; Caughey, Gillian E ; James, Michael J

Conference Name

Abstract

Blood-derived monocytes are found at sites of inflammation as well as in solid tumors and atherosclerotic arteries. They are an abundant source of inflammatory eicosanoids such as prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) and thromboxane A2, which are formed via arachidonic acid (AA) metabolism by cyclooxygenase-1/2 (COX-1/2). In vitro studies of inflammatory mediator production are conducted invariably in room air, which does not reflect the oxygen tensions found in monocyte-containing lesions, which are frequently hypoxic. In this work we examined the effects of hypoxia at levels reported in these lesions, on monocyte COX-2 expression, the related events that lead to eicosanoid synthesis, and relationships with tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha synthesis. In fresh human monocytes exposed to hypoxia (1% O2), there was an increase in COX-2 protein compared with cells in normoxia, and this was attributable to increased transcription and mRNA stability. However, the synthesis of PGE2 and thromboxane A2 was reduced in hypoxia and did not reflect the increased level of COX-2. Monocytes prelabeled with [3H]AA followed by lipopolysaccharide stimulation in the presence of hypoxia showed a reduced release of AA compared with cells in normoxia. In addition, hypoxia resulted in decreased phosphorylation of the p44/42 mitogen-activated protein kinase and of cytosolic phospholipase A2. Hypoxia also increased TNF-alpha synthesis, which appeared to play a role in COX-2 expression, and the observed increase TNF-alpha synthesis appeared to result from reduced PGE2 synthesis. Overall, the results suggest the existence of an autocrine loop of regulation between monocyte eicosanoid and TNF-alpha production, which is dysregulated in hypoxia and establishes hypoxia as being an important environmental determinant of inflammatory mediator production.

School/Discipline

Dissertation Note

Provenance

Description

Access Status

Rights

License

Grant ID

Call number

Persistent link to this record