Abstract

Abstract It has been established that LPS, the major constituent of the outer membrane of gram negative bacteria, stimulates macrophages to produce numerous inflammatory mediators, including TNF-alpha and nitric oxide (NO). Both TNF-alpha and NO are important in the macrophage-mediated cytotoxicity against invading microorganisms and tumor cells. Although many LPS-dependent immune responses have been well characterized phenomenologically, the precise signal transduction pathways in LPS-induced macrophage activation are not clear. We reported that 1) pretreatment of C3HeB/FeJ mouse peritoneal macrophages with pertussis toxin (PT) markedly enhanced LPS-induced TNF-alpha production but inhibited LPS-dependent NO production under the same conditions; 2) kinetics of the PT effects on these LPS-responses were correlated with PT-mediated ADP-ribosylation of a 41-kDa protein(s); and 3) PT pretreatment did not correct the refractory states of C3H/HeJ macrophages to wild type smooth-LPS. These results suggest that LPS stimulates TNF-alpha and NO production in mouse peritoneal macrophages through different biochemical pathways, and that the signal transduction for both pathways is regulated by a PT-sensitive factor. It is possible that this factor is a guanine nucleotide-binding regulatory protein(s). Finally our data indicate that it is unlikely that the defect of the C3H/HeJ macrophages in response to LPS is at the level of this PT-sensitive factor.

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