4.5 Article

cGMP increases antioxidant function and attenuates oxidant cell death in mouse lung microvascular endothelial cells by a protein kinase G-dependent mechanism

Publisher

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/ajplung.00442.2009

Keywords

apoptosis; necrosis; hydrogen peroxide; catalase; glutathione peroxidase

Funding

  1. National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute [1F32-HL-090199, HL-075236]
  2. Flight Attendants Medical Research Institute
  3. Maryland Chapter of the American Heart Association

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Stephens RS, Rentsendorj O, Servinsky LE, Moldobaeva A, Damico R, Pearse DB. cGMP increases antioxidant function and attenuates oxidant cell death in mouse lung microvascular endothelial cells by a protein kinase G-dependent mechanism. Am J Physiol Lung Cell Mol Physiol 299: L323-L333, 2010. First published May 7, 2010; doi:10.1152/ajplung.00442.2009.-Increasing evidence suggests that endothelial cytotoxicity from reactive oxygen species (ROS) contributes to the pathogenesis of acute lung injury. Treatments designed to increase intracellular cGMP attenuate ROS-mediated apoptosis and necrosis in several cell types, but the mechanisms are not understood, and the effect of cGMP on pulmonary endothelial cell death remains controversial. In the current study, increasing intracellular cGMP by either 8pCPT-cGMP (50 mu M) or atrial natriuretic peptide (10 nM) significantly attenuated cell death in H2O2-challenged mouse lung microvascular (MLMVEC) monolayers. 8pCPT-cGMP also decreased perfusate LDH release in isolated mouse lungs exposed to H2O2 or ischemia-reperfusion. The protective effect of increasing cGMP in MLMVECs was accompanied by enhanced endothelial H2O2 scavenging (measured by H2O2 electrode) and decreased intracellular ROS concentration (measured by 2', 7' -dichlorofluorescin fluorescence) as well as decreased phosphorylation of p38 MAPK and Akt. The cGMP-mediated cytoprotection and increased H2O2 scavenging required >2 h of 8pCPT-cGMP incubation in wild-type MLMVEC and were absent in MLMVEC from protein kinase G (PKG(I))-/-mice suggesting a PKG(I)-mediated effect on gene regulation. Catalase and glutathione peroxidase 1 (Gpx-1) protein were increased by cGMP in wild-type but not PKG(I)-/- MLMVEC monolayers. Both the cGMP-mediated increases in antioxidant proteins and H2O2 scavenging were prevented by inhibition of translation with cycloheximide. 8pCPT-cGMP had minimal effects on catalase and Gpx-1 mRNA. We conclude that cGMP, through PKG(I), attenuated H2O2-induced cytotoxicity in MLMVEC by increasing catalase and Gpx-1 expression through an unknown posttranscriptional effect.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available