| First Author | Moulakakis C | Year | 2007 |
| Journal | J Immunol | Volume | 179 |
| Issue | 7 | Pages | 4480-91 |
| PubMed ID | 17878344 | Mgi Jnum | J:152354 |
| Mgi Id | MGI:4358044 | Doi | 10.4049/jimmunol.179.7.4480 |
| Citation | Moulakakis C, et al. (2007) Surfactant protein A activation of atypical protein kinase C zeta in IkappaB-alpha-dependent anti-inflammatory immune regulation. J Immunol 179(7):4480-91 |
| abstractText | The pulmonary collectin surfactant protein (SP)-A has a pivotal role in anti-inflammatory modulation of lung immunity. The mechanisms underlying SP-A-mediated inhibition of LPS-induced NF-kappaB activation in vivo and in vitro are only partially understood. We previously demonstrated that SP-A stabilizes IkappaB-alpha, the primary regulator of NF-kappaB, in alveolar macrophages (AM) both constitutively and in the presence of LPS. In this study, we show that in AM and PBMC from IkappaB-alpha knockout/IkappaB-beta knockin mice, SP-A fails to inhibit LPS-induced TNF-alpha production and p65 nuclear translocation, confirming a critical role for IkappaB-alpha in SP-A-mediated LPS inhibition. We identify atypical (a) protein kinase C (PKC) zeta as a pivotal upstream regulator of SP-A-mediated IkappaB-alpha/NF-kappaB pathway modulation deduced from blocking experiments and confirmed by using AM from PKCzeta-/- mice. SP-A transiently triggers aPKCThr(410/403) phosphorylation, aPKC kinase activity, and translocation in primary rat AM. Coimmunoprecipitation experiments reveal that SP-A induces aPKC/p65 binding under constitutive conditions. Together the data indicate that anti-inflammatory macrophage activation via IkappaB-alpha by SP-A critically depends on PKCzeta activity, and thus attribute a novel, stimulus-specific signaling function to PKCzeta in SP-A-modulated pulmonary immune response. |