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Suppression of manganese-dependent production of nitric oxide in astrocytes: implications for therapeutic modulation of glial-derived inflammatory mediators

Primary cultured astrocytes were treated with Mn in the absence and presence of proinflammatory
cytokines to determine their effect upon stimulation of nitric oxide (NO)
production. Treatments of manganese and cytokines raised NO production to intermediate
levels, whereas combined treatment raised NO creation to much greater levels. Furthermore,
this combined treatment differed from control only in its ability to elevate cellular NO levels
at 24 hours, but not at earlier time points. Combined exposure in astrocytes derived from
mice lacking the nos2 gene prevented any increase in production of NO. Thus, manganese
and cytokines enhance NO production through activation of the nos2 gene. Additionally,
pharmacologic ligands of the peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma (PPARγ)
were used to test the role of this orphan nuclear receptor in modulating Mn-dependent
production of NO. The agonist, 1,1-Bis(3’-indolyl)-1-(p-trifluormethylphenyl) methane
(cDIM1) diminished NO in a dose-dependent manner, whereas addition of the PPARγ
antagonist, GW 9662, amplified cellular NO production, also in a dose-dependent fashion.
Moreover, it was observed that NO production was both attenuated and augmented at similar rates, suggesting the agonist and antagonist work through similar mechanisms. To clarify the
means by which NO levels are manipulated by PPARγ, we measured activation levels of the
transcription factor NF-κB, a primary factor resulting in expression of NOS2. We found that
NF-κB was slightly activated in cells treated solely with manganese or cytokines, whereas
cells treated with both manganese and cytokines showed the highest levels of activation.
Also, we found that these ligands function through an NF-κB dependent mechanism.
Treatment of cDIM1 to astrocytes already treated with manganese and cytokines caused
decreased activation of NF-κB, while addition of GW9662 to similarly treated cells resulted
in increased activation of NF-κB. While these compounds were effective at manipulating
induction of the nos2 gene, they had no effect on induction of guanosine tri-phosphate
cyclohydrolase (GTPCH) the rate limiting enzyme for the production of tetrahydrobiopterin
(BH4), a cofactor essential to the conversion of arginine to NO, Thus, these novel PPARγ
ligands can influence manganese- and cytokine-induced production of NO by an NF-κB
dependent mechanism.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:tamu.edu/oai:repository.tamu.edu:1969.1/ETD-TAMU-1045
Date15 May 2009
CreatorsWright, Tyler T.
ContributorsTjalkens, Ronald B., Zoran, Mark J.
Source SetsTexas A and M University
Languageen_US
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeBook, Thesis, Electronic Thesis, text
Formatelectronic, application/pdf, born digital

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