- Role of heme oxygenase-1 protein in the neuroprotective effects of cyclopentenone prostaglandin derivatives under oxidative stress.
Role of heme oxygenase-1 protein in the neuroprotective effects of cyclopentenone prostaglandin derivatives under oxidative stress.
Previously we found that some cyclopenteone prostaglandin derivatives (PGs), referred to as neurite outgrowth-promoting PGs (NEPPs), have dual biological activities of promoting neurite outgrowth and preventing neuronal death [Satoh et al. (2000) J. Neurochem., 75, 1092-1102; Satoh et al. (2001) J. Neurochem., 77, 50-62; Satoh et al. (2002) In Kikuchi, II. (ed.), Strategenic Medical Science Against Brain Attack. Springer-Verlag, Tokyo, pp. 78-93]. To investigate possible cellular mechanisms of the neuroprotective effects, we performed oligo hybridization-based DNA array analysis with mRNA isolated from HT22, a cell line that originated from a mouse hippocampal neuron. Several transcripts up-regulated by NEPP11 were identified. Because heme oxygenase 1 (HO-1) mRNA was the most prominently induced and was earlier reported to protect neuronal and non-neuronal cells against oxidative stress, we focused on it as a possible candidate responsible for the neuroprotective effects. We found NEPP11 to induce HO-1 protein (32 kDa) in HT22 cells in both the presence and the absence of glutamate, whereas non-neuroprotective prostaglandins (PGs) Delta12-PGJ2 or PGA2 did not. Overexpression of HO-1-green fluorescence protein (GFP) fusion protein significantly protected HT22 cells against oxidative glutamate toxicity, whereas that of GFP alone did not. Furthermore, biliverdin and bilirubin, products of HO-1 enzymatic activity on heme, protected HT22 cells from oxidative glutamate toxicity. These results, together with our previous results, suggest that NEPP11 activates the expression of HO-1 and that HO-1 produces biliverdin and bilirubin, which result in the inhibition of neuronal death induced by oxidative stress. NEPP11 is the first molecular probe reported to have a neuroprotective action through induction of HO-1 in neuronal cells.