Abstract
Lipopolysaccharide (LPS) has been implicated as the bacterial component responsible for much of the endothelial cell injury/dysfunction associated with Gram-negative bacterial infections. Protein synthesis inhibition is required to sensitize the endothelium to lipopolysaccharide-induced apoptosis, suggesting that a constitutive or inducible cytoprotective protein(s) is required for endothelial survival. We have identified two known endothelial anti-apoptotic proteins, c-FLIP and Mcl-1, the expression of which is decreased markedly in the presence of cycloheximide. Decreased expression of both proteins preceded apoptosis evoked by lipopolysaccharide + cycloheximide. Caspase inhibition protected against apoptosis, but not the decreased expression of c-FLIP and Mcl-1, suggesting that they exert protection upstream of caspase activation. Inhibition of the degradation of these two proteins with the proteasome inhibitor, lactacystin, prevented lipopolysaccharide + cycloheximide-induced apoptosis. Similarly, lactacystin protected against endothelial apoptosis induced by either tumor necrosis factor-alpha or interleukin-1beta in the presence of cycloheximide. That apoptosis could be blocked in the absence of new protein synthesis by inhibition of the proteasome degradative pathway implicates the requisite involvement of a constitutively expressed protein(s) in the endothelial cytoprotective pathway. Finally, reduction of FLIP expression with antisense oligonucleotides sensitized endothelial cells to LPS killing, demonstrating a definitive role for FLIP in the protection of endothelial cells from LPS-induced apoptosis.
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