Cyclophilin D disruption attenuates lipopolysaccharide-induced inflammatory response in primary mouse macrophages

Author:

Priber Janos1,Fonai Fruzsina1,Jakus Peter Balazs1,Racz Boglarka1,Chinopoulos Christos2,Tretter Laszlo2,Gallyas Ferenc134,Sumegi Balazs134,Veres Balazs1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biochemistry and Medical Chemistry, University of Pecs Medical School, 12 Szigeti St., H-7624 Pecs, Hungary.

2. Department of Medical Biochemistry, Semmelweis University, H-1094 Budapest, Tűzoltó u. 37-47, Hungary.

3. MTA-PTE Nuclear and Mitochondrial Interactions Research Group, Pecs, Hungary.

4. Szentagothai Research Centre, Pecs, Hungary.

Abstract

According to recent results, various mitochondrial processes can actively regulate the immune response. In the present report, we studied whether mitochondrial permeability transition (mPT) has such a role. To this end, we compared bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-induced inflammatory response in cyclophilin D (CypD) knock-out and wild-type mouse resident peritoneal macrophages. CypD is a regulator of mPT; therefore, mPT is damaged in CypD−/− cells. We chose this genetic modification-based model because the mPT inhibitor cyclosporine A regulates inflammatory processes by several pathways unrelated to the mitochondria. The LPS increased mitochondrial depolarisation, cellular and mitochondrial reactive oxygen species production, nuclear factor-κB activation, and nitrite- and tumour necrosis factor α accumulation in wild-type cells, but these changes were diminished or absent in the CypD-deficient macrophages. Additionally, LPS enhanced Akt phosphorylation/activation as well as FOXO1 and FOXO3a phosphorylation/inactivation both in wild-type and CypD−/− cells. However, Akt and FOXO phosphorylation was significantly more pronounced in CypD-deficient compared to wild-type macrophages. These results provide the first pieces of experimental evidence for the functional regulatory role of mPT in the LPS-induced early inflammatory response of macrophages.

Publisher

Canadian Science Publishing

Subject

Cell Biology,Molecular Biology,Biochemistry

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