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NADPH Oxidase Limits Innate Immune Responses in the Lungs in Mice

Authors :
Zahida Bhatti
Paul K. Wallace
John W. Christman
R. Robert Vethanayagam
Sarah L. Gaffen
Fiona E. Yull
Joy Feminella
Luigina Romani
Myungsoo Joo
Jefferson Y. Chan
Michael L. Freeman
Maegan L. Capitano
Jennifer J. Bushey
Timothy S. Blackwell
Steven M. Holland
Michael B. Sporn
Brahm H. Segal
Carly G. Dennis
Donald C. Vinh
Wei Han
Hans Minderman
Gaggar, Amit
Source :
PLoS ONE, PloS one, vol 5, iss 3, PLoS ONE, Vol 5, Iss 3, p e9631 (2010)
Publication Year :
2010
Publisher :
Public Library of Science, 2010.

Abstract

BackgroundChronic granulomatous disease (CGD), an inherited disorder of the NADPH oxidase in which phagocytes are defective in generating superoxide anion and downstream reactive oxidant intermediates (ROIs), is characterized by recurrent bacterial and fungal infections and by excessive inflammation (e.g., inflammatory bowel disease). The mechanisms by which NADPH oxidase regulates inflammation are not well understood.Methodology/principal findingsWe found that NADPH oxidase restrains inflammation by modulating redox-sensitive innate immune pathways. When challenged with either intratracheal zymosan or LPS, NADPH oxidase-deficient p47(phox-/-) mice and gp91(phox)-deficient mice developed exaggerated and progressive lung inflammation, augmented NF-kappaB activation, and elevated downstream pro-inflammatory cytokines (TNF-alpha, IL-17, and G-CSF) compared to wildtype mice. Replacement of functional NADPH oxidase in bone marrow-derived cells restored the normal lung inflammatory response. Studies in vivo and in isolated macrophages demonstrated that in the absence of functional NADPH oxidase, zymosan failed to activate Nrf2, a key redox-sensitive anti-inflammatory regulator. The triterpenoid, CDDO-Im, activated Nrf2 independently of NADPH oxidase and reduced zymosan-induced lung inflammation in CGD mice. Consistent with these findings, zymosan-treated peripheral blood mononuclear cells from X-linked CGD patients showed impaired Nrf2 activity and increased NF-kappaB activation.Conclusions/significanceThese studies support a model in which NADPH oxidase-dependent, redox-mediated signaling is critical for termination of lung inflammation and suggest new potential therapeutic targets for CGD.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
19326203
Volume :
5
Issue :
3
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
PLoS ONE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4b6a74a6e84d74a556f64b0ed265d72e