Abstract: | Toxins convertthe hepatocellular response to tumor necrosis factor- (TNF-)stimulation from proliferation to cell death, suggesting thathepatotoxins somehow sensitize hepatocytes to TNF- toxicity. Becausenuclear factor-B (NF-B) activation confers resistance to TNF-cytotoxicity in nonhepatic cells, the possibility that toxin-inducedsensitization to TNF- killing results from inhibition ofNF-B-dependent gene expression was examined in the RALA rathepatocyte cell line sensitized to TNF- cytotoxicity by actinomycinD (ActD). ActD did not affect TNF--induced hepatocyte NF-Bactivation but decreased NF-B-dependent gene expression. Expressionof an IB superrepressor rendered RALA hepatocytes sensitive toTNF--induced apoptosis in the absence of ActD. Apoptosis was blockedby caspase inhibitors, and TNF- treatment led to activation ofcaspase-2, caspase-3, and caspase-8 only when NF-B activation wasblocked. Although apoptosis was blocked by the NF-B-dependent factornitric oxide (NO), inhibition of endogenous NO production did notsensitize cells to TNF--induced cytotoxicity. Thus NF-Bactivation is the critical intracellular signal that determines whetherTNF- stimulates hepatocyte proliferation or apoptosis. Althoughexogenous NO blocks RALA hepatocyte TNF- cytotoxicity, endogenousproduction of NO is not the mechanism by which NF-B activationinhibits this death pathway. |