Indirect induction of suppressor of cytokine signalling-1 in macrophages stimulated with bacterial lipopolysaccharide: partial role of autocrine/paracrine interferon-α/β
- 1 July 2000
- journal article
- Published by Portland Press Ltd. in Biochemical Journal
- Vol. 349 (1) , 99-104
- https://doi.org/10.1042/0264-6021:3490099
Abstract
It has previously been reported by us that a brief prior exposure of mouse bone marrow culture-derived macrophages to bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS) resulted in a dramatic reduction in their ability to produce NO in response to a subsequent stimulus with either interferon-γ (IFN-γ) or IFN-γ plus LPS. We show here that this brief exposure to LPS results in an impaired response to subsequently added IFN-γ. A 2-4 h pretreatment with LPS leads to a dramatic reduction in the IFN-γ-induced DNA-binding of the transcription factor, signal transducer and activator of transcription 1α (STAT1α). This loss in ability to activate STAT1α temporally correlates with the LPS-induced accumulation of mRNA encoding the suppressor of cytokine signalling-1 (SOCS-1). However, LPS does not directly induce the synthesis of SOCS-1. Rather, LPS induces the synthesis of autocrine/paracrine factors that are the true mediators of SOCS-1 induction. IFN-α/β is one of these mediators, but plays only a partial role in the induction of SOCS-1 because neutralization of LPS-induced IFN-α/β production incompletely inhibits the induction of SOCS-1. We show that mouse IFN-β directly induces the synthesis of SOCS-1, without the need for prior protein synthesis, and does so with faster kinetics than does LPS. Our results are consistent with the non-specific nature of LPS-induced tolerance and provide a mechanistic insight into nonspecificity; LPS indirectly induces the synthesis of a protein mediator, SOCS-1, which inhibits the signalling that is induced by IFN-γ.Keywords
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