Abstract

Integral components of mammalian cell membranes, glycosphingolipids (GSL) reside in specialized plasma membrane microdomains critical for cell signaling. N-alkylated nojirimycins are compounds developed for GSL substrate deprivation therapy, blocking GSL synthesis by specifically inhibiting an essential enzyme, ceramide glucosyltransferase. Peritoneal macrophages recruited in mice pretreated with an inhibitory N-alkylnojirimycin displayed a reduced capacity to release either TNFalpha or interleukin-6 when re-exposed to whole killed E. coli in vitro. Cell viability and protein content were not affected. A nojirimycin analogue without GSL inhibitory capacity had no effect. The results show inhibition of GSL synthesis in vivo by an N-alkylnojirimycin can reduce the response to an inflammatory stimulus and indicate N-alkylnojirimycins have experimental and potential clinical value for modulating innate immune responses in vivo.

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