Abstract

We previously showed that oxidative stress inhibits leukemia inhibitory factor (LIF) signaling by targeting JAK1, and the catalytic domains of JAK 1 and 2 have a cysteine-based redox switch. Thus, we postulated that the NO sibling and thiophylic compound, nitroxyl (HNO), would inhibit LIF-induced JAK-STAT3 activation. Pretreatment of human microvascular endothelial cells (HMEC-1) or neonatal rat cardiomyocytes with the HNO donors Angeli’s salt or nitrosocyclohexyl acetate (NCA) inhibited LIF-induced STAT3 activation. NCA pretreatment also blocked the induction of downstream inflammatory genes (e.g. intercellular adhesion molecule 1, CCAAT/enhancer binding protein delta). The related 1-nitrosocyclohexyl pivalate (NCP; not a nitroxyl donor) was equally effective in inhibiting STAT3 activation, suggesting that these compounds act as thiolate targeting electrophiles. The JAK1 redox switch is likely not a target of acyloxy nitroso compounds, as NCA had no effect on JAK1 catalytic activity and only modestly affected JAK1-induced phosphorylation of the LIF receptor. However, pretreatment of recombinant human STAT3 with NCA or NCP reduced labeling of free sulfhydryl residues. We show that NCP in the presence of diamide enhanced STAT3 glutathionylation and dimerization in adult mouse cardiac myocytes and altered STAT3 under non-reducing conditions. Finally, we show that monomeric STAT3 levels are decreased in the Gαq model of heart failure in a redox-sensitive manner. Altogether, our evidence indicates that STAT3 has redox-sensitive cysteines that regulate its activation and are targeted by HNO donors and acyloxy nitroso compounds. These findings raise the possibility of new therapeutic strategies to target STAT3 signaling via a redox-dependent manner, particularly in the context of cardiac and non-cardiac diseases with prominent pro-inflammatory signaling.

Highlights

  • Cytokines that signal through the shared receptor gp130 play a critical role in promoting or suppressing inflammation

  • In HL-1 cells, we observed that LIFinduced a higher molecular weight band that was reactive with the anti-pY705 signal transducer and activator of transcription 3 (STAT3) antibody and its induction was inhibited as well by nitrosocyclohexyl pivalate (NCP) (Fig. 3C)

  • We report that two newly-described acyloxy nitroso compounds that target reactive cysteine residues inhibit LIFinduced STAT3 activation

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Summary

Introduction

Cytokines that signal through the shared receptor gp130 play a critical role in promoting or suppressing inflammation. As such, these cytokines are involved in cancer, the immune response, wound healing, and ischemia or ischemia/reperfusion (IR) injury [1]. The Janus kinase JAK1, which is pre-associated with gp130 and the LIFR, is activated by transautophosphorylation as a result of dimer formation. JAK1 phosphorylates STAT3 binding sites on gp130 and LIFR. STAT3 activation has been implicated in protection of the myocardium by ischemic and pharmacological pre- and post-conditioning [3,4,5,6]. In coronary endothelial cells and microvascular endothelial cells in general, STAT3 has been linked to protection of cardiac myocytes from IR injury and regulation of the inflammatory response [7,8,9,10,11]

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