G Protein-Coupled Receptor Ca2+-Linked Mitochondrial Reactive Oxygen Species Are Essential for Endothelial/Leukocyte Adherence

BJ Hawkins, LA Solt, I Chowdhury, AS Kazi… - … and cellular biology, 2007 - Taylor & Francis
BJ Hawkins, LA Solt, I Chowdhury, AS Kazi, MR Abid, WC Aird, MJ May, JK Foskett…
Molecular and cellular biology, 2007Taylor & Francis
Receptor-mediated signaling is commonly associated with multiple functions, including the
production of reactive oxygen species. However, whether mitochondrion-derived superoxide
(mROS) contributes directly to physiological signaling is controversial. Here we demonstrate
a previously unknown mechanism in which physiologic Ca2+-evoked mROS production
plays a pivotal role in endothelial cell (EC) activation and leukocyte firm adhesion. G protein-
coupled receptor (GPCR) and tyrosine kinase-mediated inositol 1, 4, 5-trisphosphate …
Receptor-mediated signaling is commonly associated with multiple functions, including the production of reactive oxygen species. However, whether mitochondrion-derived superoxide (mROS) contributes directly to physiological signaling is controversial. Here we demonstrate a previously unknown mechanism in which physiologic Ca2+-evoked mROS production plays a pivotal role in endothelial cell (EC) activation and leukocyte firm adhesion. G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) and tyrosine kinase-mediated inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate-dependent mitochondrial Ca2+ uptake resulted in NADPH oxidase-independent mROS production. However, GPCR-linked mROS production did not alter mitochondrial function or trigger cell death but rather contributed to activation of NF-κΒ and leukocyte adhesion via the EC induction of intercellular adhesion molecule 1. Dismutation of mROS by manganese superoxide dismutase overexpression and a cell-permeative superoxide dismutase mimetic ablated NF-κΒ transcriptional activity and facilitated leukocyte detachment from the endothelium under simulated circulation following GPCR- but not cytokine-induced activation. These results demonstrate that mROS is the downstream effector molecule that translates receptor-mediated Ca2+ signals into proinflammatory signaling and leukocyte/EC firm adhesion.
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