Abstract

We have recently documented a marked dependence of ovarian prostaglandin endoperoxide synthase (PGS)-2 transcripts, proteins, and activity on interleukin (IL) 1, a putative intermediary in the ovulatory cascade. The purpose of the present study was to characterize the cellular and molecular mechanisms underlying the ability of IL-1beta to upregulate the steady-state levels of ovarian transcripts corresponding to PGS-2. Results of studies designed to enrich or deplete nitric oxide strongly suggest that the stimulatory effect of IL-1beta on ovarian PGS-2 expression is independent of nitric oxide. Utilization of a series of agents designed to simulate or enhance transduction via the sphingomyelin ceramide cycle suggests that the long-term stimulatory effect of IL-1beta on ovarian PGS-2 gene expression is independent of ceramide. In contrast, inhibition of prostaglandin biosynthesis with a series of distinct inhibitors suggests that the ability of IL-1beta to upregulate ovarian PGS-2 transcripts is due, if only in part, to the generation of endogenous prostaglandin estradiol-17beta (E(2)). Inhibition of protein biosynthesis suggested that the IL-1beta-induced PGS-2 gene expression required de novo protein biosynthesis. Our findings revealed substantial IL-1beta-mediated stabilization of PGS-2 transcripts, as assessed by a threefold increase in the half-life of the message. We have also observed the ability of IL-1beta to upregulate the transcription of PGS-2 promoter constructs subjected to transient transfection into whole-ovarian dispersates (twofold increase as assessed by activation of the luciferase reporter gene). Taken together, these findings suggest that the stimulatory effect of IL-1beta on PGS-2 expression is 1) independent of nitric oxide as well as ceramide, 2) dependent on prostaglandin E(2), 3) contingent on de novo protein biosynthesis, and 4) accounted for by both increased transcription and message stabilization. These observations provide indirect support for the hypothesis that IL-1beta, acting in part through PGS-2 (an obligatory ovulatory principal), may constitute a key intermediary in the ovulatory cascade.

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