4.5 Article

Lipopolysaccharide rapidly modifies adenosine receptor transcripts in murine and human macrophages:: role of NF-κB in A2A adenosine receptor induction

Journal

BIOCHEMICAL JOURNAL
Volume 391, Issue -, Pages 575-580

Publisher

PORTLAND PRESS LTD
DOI: 10.1042/BJ20050888

Keywords

adenosine receptor; ATL146e; inflammation; lipopolysaccharide; macrophage; tumour necrosis factor alpha (TNF alpha)

Funding

  1. NHLBI NIH HHS [HL37942, R01 HL037942] Funding Source: Medline

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The A(2A) adenosine receptor (A(2A)AR) mediates anti-inflammatory actions of adenosine in a variety of cell types. LPS (lipopolysaccharide) was reported to induce a small (< d 2-fold) increase in the expression of A(2A)AR mRNA in human monocytes and monocytic cell lines. We investigated the effects of LPS on the expression of adenosine receptor mRNAs in primary mouse IPM Phi (intraperitoneal macrophages), human macrophages and Wehi-3 cells. Treatment with 10 ng/ml LPS for 4 h produced a > 100-fold increase in A(2A)AR mRNA. LPS-induced increases in mRNA for A(2A)AR and TNF alpha (tumour necrosis factor alpha) are reduced by 90% in IPM Phi pretreated with the NF-kappa B (nuclear factor kappa B) inhibitor, BAY 11-7082 {(E)3-[(4-methylphenyl)sulphonyl]2-propenenitrile; 10 mu M). In Wehi-3 cells exposed to LPS, A2AAR and A(2B)AR transcripts are elevated by 290- and 10-fold respectively, the A(1)AR transcript is unchanged and the A(3)AR transcript is decreased by 67%. The induction of A(2A)AR mRNA by LPS is detectable after 1 h, reaches a peak at 6 h at 600 times control and remains elevated beyond 24 It. The ED50 (effective dose) of LPS is 2.3 ng/ml. A(2A)AR receptor number, measured by I-125-ZM241385 binding to whole cells, is undetectable in naive cells and increases linearly at a rate of 23 receptors . cell(-1) - min(-1) to a B-max of 348 fmol/mg (28 000 receptors/cell) in 20 h. The increase in receptor number is correlated with an increase in the potency of an A(2A) agonist (4-{3-[6-amino-9-(5-ethylcarbamoyl-3,4-dihydroxy-tetrahydrofuran-2-yl)-9H-purin-2-yl] -prop-2-ynyl]-cyclohexanecarboxylic acid methyl ester; referred to as ATL146e) to stimulate cAMP in these cells. After LPS pretreatment, the potency of the A(2a) agonist, ATL146e, to reduce TNFu release from IPM4 Phi was increased by 200-fold. The results support the hypothesis that regulation of adenosine receptor expression, especially up-regulation of the A(2A)AR, is part of a delayed feedback mechanism initiated through NF-kappa B to terminate the activation of human and mouse macrophages.

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