Abstract

Lipopolysaccharide (LPS) is a bacterial cell component that plays multifunctional roles in inflammatory reactions, and one of the roles is as a powerful stimulator of bone resorption. LPS stimulated bone resorption via CD14 in mouse calvaria and was reported to function as a receptor for bacterial LPS complexed with serum proteins. Interleukin-6 (IL-6) is capable of stimulating the differentiation of osteoclasts from their hematopoietic precursors, and LPS elevates IL-6 synthesis in human osteoblastic cells. However, the signaling pathway of LPS-induced IL-6 synthesis in osteoblasts is unknown. In the present study, we could detect the existence of CD14 in human osteoblastic cells by RT-PCR analysis and show that LPS increased IL-6 mRNA and synthesis via CD14 in human osteoblastic cells. In human osteoblasts (SaM-1 cells) treated with 10 microg/ml LPS, increases in IL-6 mRNA and synthesis were inhibited by anti-CD14 antibody (MEM-18), PD98059 (an inhibitor of classic mitogen-activated protein kinase [MAPK]), or SB203580 (an inhibitor of p38 MAPK) but were not inhibited by H-89 (an inhibitor of protein kinase A [PKA]) and calphostin C (an inhibitor of protein kinase C [PKC]). Furthermore, LPS-induced IL-6 synthesis was inhibited by curcumin (an inhibitor of activating protein-1 [AP-1]) but not by pyrrolidine dithiocarbamate (PDTC) (an inhibitor of nuclear factor kappa B [NF-kappaB]). The findings of the present study suggest that the LPS receptor CD14, existent in human osteoblastic cells, and IL-6 synthesis in response to LPS probably occur via CD14, p38 MAPK, and MAP kinase/extracellular-regulated kinase kinase (MEK), leading to the transcriptional activation of AP-1 in human osteoblastic cells.

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