Diphosphoryl lipid A from Rhodobacter sphaeroides transiently activates NF-kappa B but inhibits lipopolysaccharide induction of kappa light chain and Oct-2 in the B-cell lymphoma line 70Z/3

Author:

Lawrence O1,Rachie N1,Qureshi N1,Bomsztyk K1,Sibley C H1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Genetics, University of Washington, Seattle 98195.

Abstract

Lipopolysaccharide (LPS) is implicated in much of the pathophysiology associated with gram-negative septic shock. One approach to this serious clinical problem is to develop new drugs that antagonize the action of toxic LPS. A model system to study LPS action and test for potential antagonists is readily provided by LPS regulation of the kappa gene in the murine B-cell line 70Z/3. Rhodobacter sphaeroides diphosphoryl lipid A (RsDPLA) effectively blocked toxic LPS induction of kappa light-chain immunoglobulin expression in 70Z/3 cells. Induction of kappa expression by LPS is dependent on the activation of at least two transcription factors, Oct-2 and NF-kappa B. RsDPLA completely repressed the long-term activation of NF-kappa B observed after 24 h of Salmonella typhosa LPS treatment and antagonized activation of oct-2 mRNA expression. However, RsDPLA was not an inert competitor of LPS. RsDPLA alone strongly activated NF-kappa B binding activity by 30 min but not beyond 9 h of treatment. It also induced a small increase in oct-2 mRNA levels. RsDPLA is not simply a weak agonist; we found no graded increase in kappa expression with increasing RsDPLA concentrations up to 50 micrograms/ml. The NF-kappa B complexes activated by RsDPLA and S. typhosa LPS were both composed of the p50-p65 heterodimer. These results suggest that the physiological LPS receptor(s) on B cells transmits qualitatively different signals depending on the nature of the binding ligand and that the fatty acyl groups of LPS play an important role in activating signal transduction.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Immunology,Microbiology,Parasitology

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