Thioredoxin Facilitates the Induction of Heme Oxygenase-1 in Response to Inflammatory Mediators

2000 
Abstract Heme oxygenase (HO)-1 is a stress response protein that is regulated by oxidative stress. HO-1 catalyzes the generation of biliverdin, carbon monoxide, and iron from heme. Lipopolysaccharide (LPS) and interleukin (IL)-1β induce HO-1 through the binding of nuclear proteins to AP-1 motifs in enhancer regions upstream from the transcription start site. The DNA binding activity of AP-1 proteins depends on the reduction of cysteines in their DNA-binding domains. We found that agents that disrupt free sulfhydryl groups abolish AP-1 binding activity in nuclear proteins obtained from rat aortic smooth muscle cells and macrophages stimulated with IL-1β or LPS. Thioredoxin (TRX) may regulate the redox status of nuclear transcription factors in response to oxidative stimuli, thus we determined the role of TRX in the physiologic regulation of HO-1. TRX underwent nuclear translocation in cells stimulated with IL-1β and LPS. We transfected macrophages with a heterologous promoter construct containing two AP-1 sites from an upstream enhancer region in the HO-1 promoter. Recombinant TRX induced promoter activity to a level analogous to that induced by LPS, and this TRX response was abolished by mutation of the AP-1 sites. An inhibitor of TRX reductase, used to prevent TRX translocation in the reduced state, decreased HO-1 induction by IL-1β and LPS. These data provide the first evidence that TRX contributes to the induction of HO-1 by inflammatory mediators.
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