Abstract

Reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation, particularly by the endothelial NADPH oxidase family of proteins, plays a major role in the pathophysiology associated with lung inflammation, ischemia/reperfusion injury, sepsis, hyperoxia, and ventilator-associated lung injury. We examined potential regulators of ROS production and discovered that hyperoxia treatment of human pulmonary artery endothelial cells induced recruitment of the vesicular regulator, dynamin 2, the non-receptor tyrosine kinase, c-Abl, and the NADPH oxidase subunit, p47(phox), to caveolin-enriched microdomains (CEMs). Silencing caveolin-1 (which blocks CEM formation) and/or c-Abl expression with small interference RNA inhibited hyperoxia-mediated tyrosine phosphorylation and association of dynamin 2 with p47(phox) and ROS production. In addition, treatment of human pulmonary artery endothelial cells with dynamin 2 small interfering RNA or the dynamin GTPase inhibitor, Dynasore, attenuated hyperoxia-mediated ROS production and p47(phox) recruitment to CEMs. Using purified recombinant proteins, we observed that c-Abl tyrosine-phosphorylated dynamin 2, and this phosphorylation increased p47(phox)/dynamin 2 association (change in the dissociation constant (K(d)) from 85.8 to 6.9 nm). Furthermore, exposure of mice to hyperoxia increased ROS production, c-Abl activation, dynamin 2 association with p47(phox), and pulmonary leak, events that were attenuated in the caveolin-1 knock-out mouse confirming a role for CEMs in ROS generation. These results suggest that hyperoxia induces c-Abl-mediated dynamin 2 phosphorylation required for recruitment of p47(phox) to CEMs and subsequent ROS production in lung endothelium.

Highlights

  • 34964 JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY tributing to inflammation, tumor angiogenesis, atherosclerosis, and acute lung injury [1]

  • We have recently demonstrated that exposure of human pulmonary artery endothelial cells (HPAECs) to hyperoxia (95% O2) increases the reactive oxygen species (ROS) production that is dependent on NADPH oxidase activation and independent of the mitochondrial electron transport or xanthine/xanthine oxidase systems [4]

  • Immunoblot analysis of caveolin-enriched microdomains (CEMs) isolated from normoxia- and hyperoxia-treated human lung ECs revealed that hyperoxia induced recruitment of the vesicular regulator, dynamin 2, the small GTPase, Rac1, the actin cytoskeletal regulatory protein, cortactin [10], and the NADPH oxidase subunit, p47phox, to join pre-existing NADPH subunits, p22phox and Nox2, in CEMs (Fig. 2)

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Summary

Introduction

34964 JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY tributing to inflammation, tumor angiogenesis, atherosclerosis, and acute lung injury [1]. These results suggest a role for dynamin 2 in ROS production and caveolin-1-dependent tyrosine phosphorylation and association of dynamin 2 with p47phox in response to hyperoxia in human lung ECs. Dynamin 2 Tyrosine Phosphorylation by c-Abl Regulates p47phox Complex Formation and Hyperoxia-mediated ROS Production—Dynamin 2 can be tyrosine-phosphorylated by Src [23], a tyrosine kinase important in NADPH oxidase activation [2, 8].

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