Duration and Intensity of NF-κB Activity Determine the Severity of Endotoxin-Induced Acute Lung Injury

M. Brett Everhart(Vanderbilt University), Wei Han(Vanderbilt University), Taylor P. Sherrill(Vanderbilt University), Melissa Arutiunov(Vanderbilt University), Vasiliy V. Polosukhin(Vanderbilt University), James R. Burke(Bristol-Myers Squibb (Germany)), Ruxana T. Sadikot(United States Department of Veterans Affairs), John W. Christman(University of Illinois Chicago), Fiona E. Yull(Vanderbilt University), Timothy S. Blackwell(United States Department of Veterans Affairs)
The Journal of Immunology
April 1, 2006
Cited by 232

Abstract

Activation of innate immunity in the lungs can lead to a self-limited inflammatory response or progress to severe lung injury. We investigated whether specific parameters of NF-kappaB pathway activation determine the outcome of acute lung inflammation using a novel line of transgenic reporter mice. Following a single i.p. injection of Escherichia coli LPS, transient NF-kappaB activation was identified in a variety of lung cell types, and neutrophilic inflammation resolved without substantial tissue injury. However, administration of LPS over 24 h by osmotic pump (LPS pump) implanted into the peritoneum resulted in sustained, widespread NF-kappaB activation and neutrophilic inflammation that culminated in lung injury at 48 h. To determine whether intervention in the NF-kappaB pathway could prevent progression to lung injury in the LPS pump model, we administered a specific IkappaB kinase inhibitor (BMS-345541) to down-regulate NF-kappaB activation following the onset of inflammation. Treatment with BMS-345541 beginning at 20 h after osmotic pump implantation reduced lung NF-kappaB activation, concentration of KC and MIP-2 in lung lavage, neutrophil influx, and lung edema measured at 48 h. Therefore, sustained NF-kappaB activation correlates with severity of lung injury, and interdiction in the NF-kappaB pathway is beneficial even after the onset of lung inflammation.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis