NYMC Faculty Publications

Involvement of Protein Kinase C and Protein Tyrosine Kinase in Lipopolysaccharide-Induced TNF-Alpha and IL-1 Beta Production by Human Monocytes

Author Type(s)

Faculty

Additional Author Affiliation

Touro College of Dental Medicine at NYMC

Journal Title

Journal of Immunology

First Page

1818

Last Page

1824

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

8-15-1994

Department

Pharmacology

Abstract

Bacterial LPS stimulates human monocytes to secrete inflammatory cytokines, which are involved in several disease processes. However, the mechanism of LPS activation of cytokine expression and secretion is not completely understood. In this study, we investigated the signal transduction pathways involved in LPS-stimulated TNF-alpha and IL-1 beta secretion. TNF-alpha and IL-1 beta secretion were completely blocked by protein kinase C (PKC) and cyclic nucleotide-dependent protein kinase inhibitor, H-7, but were not affected by H-89, a specific cyclic nucleotide-dependent protein kinase inhibitor. In addition, LPS was found to induce activation of PKC, reaching maximal activity at 30 min and returning to unstimulated levels after 60 min. LPS stimulation only slightly increased intracellular levels of diacylglycerol, the natural activator of PKC, and pretreatment of monocytes with the diacylglycerol-kinase inhibitor, R59022, did not affect LPS-stimulated TNF-alpha secretion. LPS-induced PKC activation was found not to be affected by blocking of the LPS receptor, CD14, with mAb or by inhibition of protein tyrosine kinase with herbimycin A. However, these agents suppressed LPS-induced TNF-alpha secretion and TNF-alpha mRNA accumulation. The results suggest that TNF-alpha and IL-1 beta secretion after LPS stimulation of human monocytes requires the activation of protein tyrosine kinase and PKC, upstream to the activation of gene transcription. The activation of PKC by LPS is probably mediated by a diacylglycerol-independent pathway.

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