Adenosine-Dependent Induction of Glutathione Peroxidase 1 in Human Primary Endothelial Cells and Protection Against Oxidative Stress
- 29 April 2005
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Circulation Research
- Vol. 96 (8) , 831-837
- https://doi.org/10.1161/01.res.0000164401.21929.cf
Abstract
Cellular glutathione peroxidase (GPx-1), a selenocysteine-containing enzyme, plays a central role in protecting cells from oxidative injury. GPx-1 is ubiquitously expressed in eukaryotic cells where it reduces hydrogen and lipid peroxides to alcohols. Adenosine, which is released from stressed or injured cells, protects against ischemia/reperfusion injury and apoptosis. In this study, we hypothesize that the cytoprotective effect of adenosine involves an increase in the activity of GPx-1. Treatment of human primary pulmonary artery endothelial cells (HPAECs) with 50 μmol/L adenosine in the presence of 10 μmol/L erytho-9-(2-hydroxy-3-nonyl)adenine (EHNA), an adenosine deaminase inhibitor, for 48 hours increased GPx-1 mRNA levels 2-fold. GPx-1 protein and enzyme activity also increased ≈2-fold after treatment. The induction of GPx-1 expression was found to be a consequence of increased mRNA stability and not an increase in transcription. Bisindolylmaleimide I (BIM), a protein kinase C signaling pathway inhibitor, significantly attenuated the induction of GPx-1 mRNA by ≈36%. The adenosine/EHNA-treated cells were more resistant to hydrogen peroxide stress. Both pharmacological inhibition and siRNA knockdown of GPx-1 attenuated the protective affect of adenosine/EHNA treatment, indicating that the adenosine-induced increase in GPx-1 contributes to an increase in cellular protection against oxidative stress. These data suggest that adenosine may protect the cardiovascular system from ischemia/reperfusion injury, in part, by enhancing the expression of the central intracellular antioxidant enzyme, GPx-1.Keywords
This publication has 51 references indexed in Scilit:
- RNA-Binding Proteins Heterogeneous Nuclear Ribonucleoprotein A1, E1, and K Are Involved in Post-Transcriptional Control of Collagen I and III SynthesisCirculation Research, 2004
- MECHANISM AND REGULATION OF SELENOPROTEIN SYNTHESISAnnual Review of Nutrition, 2003
- Coupled tRNASec-Dependent Assembly of the Selenocysteine Decoding ApparatusMolecular Cell, 2003
- Heterozygous Cellular Glutathione Peroxidase Deficiency in the MouseCirculation, 2002
- Paraquat-Induced Oxidative Stress and Dysfunction of the Glutathione Redox Cycle in Pulmonary Microvascular Endothelial CellsToxicology and Applied Pharmacology, 2002
- Opposite Roles of Selenium-dependent Glutathione Peroxidase-1 in Superoxide Generator Diquat- and Peroxynitrite-induced Apoptosis and SignalingJournal of Biological Chemistry, 2001
- Macrophage Glutathione Content and Glutathione Peroxidase Activity Are Inversely Related to Cell-Mediated Oxidation of LDLFree Radical Biology & Medicine, 1998
- TGF-β1 Triggers Oxidative Modifications and Enhances Apoptosis in Hit Cells Through Accumulation of Reactive Oxygen Species by Suppression of Catalase and Glutathione PeroxidaseFree Radical Biology & Medicine, 1997
- Inactivation of Glutathione Peroxidase by Nitric OxideJournal of Biological Chemistry, 1995
- Ischaemic preconditioning and myocardial adaptation to ischaemiaCardiovascular Research, 1993