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Critical role of cAMP response element binding protein expression in hypoxia-elicited induction of epithelial tumor necrosis factor-alpha.
Authors:C T Taylor  N Fueki  A Agah  R M Hershberg  S P Colgan
Institution:Center for Experimental Therapeutics and Reperfusion Injury, Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02115, USA.
Abstract:Tissue hypoxia is intimately associated with a number of chronic inflammatory conditions of the intestine. In this study, we investigated the impact of hypoxia on the expression of a panel of inflammatory mediators by intestinal epithelia. Initial experiments revealed that epithelial (T84 cell) exposure to ambient hypoxia evoked a time-dependent induction of the proinflammatory markers tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha), interleukin-8 (IL-8), and major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class II (37 +/- 6.1-, 7 +/- 0.8-, and 9 +/- 0.9-fold increase over normoxia, respectively, each p < 0.01). Since the gene regulatory elements for each of these molecules contains an NF-kappaB binding domain, we investigated the influence of hypoxia on NF-kappaB activation. Cellular hypoxia induced a time-dependent increase in nuclear p65, suggesting a dominant role for NF-kappaB in hypoxia-elicited induction of proinflammatory gene products. Further work, however, revealed that hypoxia does not influence epithelial intercellular adhesion molecule 1 (ICAM-1) or MHC class I, the promoters of which also contain NF-kappaB binding domains, suggesting differential responses to hypoxia. Importantly, the genes for TNF-alpha, IL-8, and MHC class II, but not ICAM-1 or MHC class I, contain cyclic AMP response element (CRE) consensus motifs. Thus, we examined the role of cAMP in the hypoxia-elicited phenotype. Hypoxia diminished CRE binding protein (CREB) expression. In parallel, T84 cell cAMP was diminished by hypoxia (83 +/- 13.2% decrease, p < 0.001), and pharmacologic inhibition of protein kinase A induced TNF-alpha and protein release (9 +/- 3.9-fold increase). Addback of cAMP resulted in reversal of hypoxia-elicited TNF-alpha release (86 +/- 3.2% inhibition with 3 mM 8-bromo-cAMP). Furthermore, overexpression of CREB but not mutated CREB by retroviral-mediated gene transfer reversed hypoxia-elicited induction of TNF-alpha defining a causal relationship between hypoxia-elicited CREB reduction and TNF-alpha induction. Such data indicate a prominent role for CREB in the hypoxia-elicited epithelial phenotype and implicate intracellular cAMP as an important second messenger in differential induction of proinflammatory mediators.
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