2 resultados para Dithiocarbamate
em BORIS: Bern Open Repository and Information System - Berna - Suiça
Resumo:
Infection of cattle with the protozoan Theileria parva results in uncontrolled T lymphocyte proliferation resulting in lesions resembling multicentric lymphoma. Parasitized cells exhibit autocrine growth characterized by persistent translocation of the transcriptional regulatory factor nuclear factor kappaB (NFkappaB) to the nucleus and consequent enhanced expression of interleukin 2 and the interleukin 2 receptor. How T. parva induces persistent NFkappaB activation, required for T cell activation and proliferation, is unknown. We hypothesized that the parasite induces degradation of the IkappaB molecules which normally sequester NFkappaB in the cytoplasm and that continuous degradation requires viable parasites. Using T. parva-infected T cells, we showed that the parasite mediates continuous phosphorylation and proteolysis of IkappaBalpha. However, IkappaBalpha reaccumulated to high levels in parasitized cells, which indicated that T. parva did not alter the normal NFkappaB-mediated positive feedback loop which restores cytoplasmic IkappaBalpha. In contrast, T. parva mediated continuous degradation of IkappaBbeta resulting in persistently low cytoplasmic IkappaBbeta levels. Normal IkappaBbeta levels were only restored following T. parva killing, indicating that viable parasites are required for IkappaBbeta degradation. Treatment of T. parva-infected cells with pyrrolidine dithiocarbamate, a metal chelator, blocked both IkappaB degradation and consequent enhanced expression of NFkappaB dependent genes. However treatment using the antioxidant N-acetylcysteine had no effect on either IkappaB levels or NFkappaB activation, indicating that the parasite subverts the normal IkappaB regulatory pathway downstream of the requirement for reactive oxygen intermediates. Identification of the critical points regulated by T. parva may provide new approaches for disease control as well as increase our understanding of normal T cell function.
Resumo:
Nuclear factor-kappaB regulates genes that control immune and inflammatory responses and are involved in the pathogenesis of several diseases, including AIDS and cancer. It has been proposed that reactive oxygen intermediates participate in NF-kappaB activation pathways, and compounds with putative antioxidant activity such as N-acetyl-L-cysteine (NAC) and pyrrolidine dithiocarbamate (PDTC) have been used interchangeably to demonstrate this point. We examined their effects, separately and combined, on different stages of the NF-kappaB activation pathway, in primary and in transformed T cells. We show that NAC, contrary to its reported role as an NF-kappaB inhibitor, can actually enhance rather than inhibit IkappaB degradation and, most importantly, show that in all cases NAC exerts a dominant antagonistic effect on PDTC-mediated NF-kappaB inhibition. This was observed at the level of IkappaB degradation, NF-kappaB DNA binding, and HIV-LTR-driven reporter gene expression. NAC also counteracted growth arrest and apoptosis induced by dithiocarbamates. Antagonistic effects were further observed at the level of jun-NH2-terminal kinase, p38 and ATF-2 activation. Our findings argue against the widely accepted assumption that NAC inhibits all NF-kappaB activation pathways and shows that two compounds, previously thought to function through a common inhibitory mechanism, can also have antagonistic effects.