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  • NOS1-derived nitric oxide p...
    Baig, Mirza Saqib; Zaichick, Sofia V; Mao, Mao; de Abreu, Andre L; Bakhshi, Farnaz R; Hart, Peter C; Saqib, Uzma; Deng, Jing; Chatterjee, Saurabh; Block, Michelle L; Vogel, Stephen M; Malik, Asrar B; Consolaro, Marcia E L; Christman, John W; Minshall, Richard D; Gantner, Benjamin N; Bonini, Marcelo G

    The Journal of experimental medicine, 2015-Sep-21, 2015-09-21, 20150921, Letnik: 212, Številka: 10
    Journal Article

    The NF-κB pathway is central to the regulation of inflammation. Here, we demonstrate that the low-output nitric oxide (NO) synthase 1 (NOS1 or nNOS) plays a critical role in the inflammatory response by promoting the activity of NF-κB. Specifically, NOS1-derived NO production in macrophages leads to proteolysis of suppressor of cytokine signaling 1 (SOCS1), alleviating its repression of NF-κB transcriptional activity. As a result, NOS1(-/-) mice demonstrate reduced cytokine production, lung injury, and mortality when subjected to two different models of sepsis. Isolated NOS1(-/-) macrophages demonstrate similar defects in proinflammatory transcription on challenge with Gram-negative bacterial LPS. Consistently, we found that activated NOS1(-/-) macrophages contain increased SOCS1 protein and decreased levels of p65 protein compared with wild-type cells. NOS1-dependent S-nitrosation of SOCS1 impairs its binding to p65 and targets SOCS1 for proteolysis. Treatment of NOS1(-/-) cells with exogenous NO rescues both SOCS1 degradation and stabilization of p65 protein. Point mutation analysis demonstrated that both Cys147 and Cys179 on SOCS1 are required for its NO-dependent degradation. These findings demonstrate a fundamental role for NOS1-derived NO in regulating TLR4-mediated inflammatory gene transcription, as well as the intensity and duration of the resulting host immune response.