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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 
 
 

Ceramide is not a signal for tumor necrosis factor-induced gene expression but does cause programmed cell death in human vascular endothelial cells.

Tumor necrosis factor (TNF) activates transcription of endothelial leukocyte adhesion molecule-1 (CD62E) in endothelial cells (ECs) through the binding to the gene promoter of the p50/ p65 heterodimeric form of nuclear factor-kappa B (NF-kappa B) and of the N-terminal phosphorylated form of the ATF2/c-Jun transcription factor, which is phosphorylated by Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK). However, the intracellular signaling pathways that activate endothelial NF-kappa B and JNK in TNF-induced responses are unknown. In this study we have examined the role of a recently described TNF signaling pathway involving sphingomyelin activation to generate ceramide, a potential intracellular mediator. We find that concentrations of TNF that strongly activate NF-kappa B and JNK within 15 minutes do not produce either a measurable decline in sphingomyelin or a measurable generation of ceramide in cultured human umbilical vein ECs at any time examined. Stimulation of ECs with purified sphingomyelinase (SMase) enzyme causes a rapid 60% to 80% decrease in cellular sphingomyelin content and a large increase in ceramide. However, SMase treatment only minimally activates NF-kappa B, achieving levels that are insufficient to initiate gene transcription. Extracellular SMase does not have access to intracellular sphingomyelin, but treatment of ECs with membrane-permeant ceramide analogues still completely fails to activate NF-kappa B and only activates JNK at late times. Neither SMase nor ceramide analogues induce gene transcription or surface expression of endothelial leukocyte adhesion molecules that are readily induced by TNF. Strikingly, low concentrations of membrane-permeant ceramide cause programmed cell death in ECs, a finding not observed at any concentrations of TNF tested. We conclude that ceramide is not an important second messenger for TNF signaling of gene transcription in ECs but may be a second messenger for cell death in response to as-yet-unidentified signals.[1]

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