posted on 2013-10-31, 00:00authored byKurt Bachmaier, Edgar Guzman, Takeshi Kawamura, Xiaopei Gao, Asrar B. Malik
The complement anaphylatoxin C5a has a pathogenetic role in endotoxin-induced lung inflammatory injury by regulating
phagocytic cell migration and activation. Endotoxin and C5a activate the enzyme sphingosine kinase (Sphk) 1 to generate
the signaling lipid sphingosine-1-phosphate (S1P), a critical regulator of phagocyte function. We assessed the function of
Sphk1 and S1P in experimental lung inflammatory injury and determined their roles in anaphylatoxin receptor signaling and
on the expression of the two C5a receptors, C5aR (CD88) and C5L2, on phagocytes. We report that Sphk1 gene deficient
(Sphk12/2) mice had augmented lung inflammatory response to endotoxin compared to wild type mice. Sphk1 was
required for C5a-mediated reduction in cytokine and chemokine production by macrophages. Moreover, neutrophils from
Sphk12/2 mice failed to upregulate the anaphylatoxin receptor C5L2 in response to LPS. Exogenous S1P restored C5L2 cell
surface expression of Sphk12/2 mouse neutrophils to wild type levels but had no effect on cell surface expression of the
other anaphylatoxin receptor, CD88. These results provide the first genetic evidence of the crucial role of Sphk1 in
regulating the balance between expression of CD88 and C5L2 in phagocytes. S1P-mediated up-regulation of C5L2 is a novel
therapeutic target for mitigating endotoxin-induced lung inflammatory injury.
Funding
This work was supported by United States National Institutes of Health grants HL060678, HL077806, and HL45638