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Tobacco smoke cooperates with interleukin‐1β to alter β‐catenin trafficking in vascular endothelium resulting in increased permeability and induction of cyclooxygenase‐2 expression in vitro and in vivo
Author(s) -
Barbieri Silvia S.,
Weksler Babette B.
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
the faseb journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.709
H-Index - 277
eISSN - 1530-6860
pISSN - 0892-6638
DOI - 10.1096/fj.06-7557com
Subject(s) - small interfering rna , phosphorylation , proinflammatory cytokine , protein kinase b , chemistry , in vivo , cancer research , microbiology and biotechnology , inflammation , endothelium , transfection , medicine , biology , biochemistry , gene
Cigarette smoking affects all phases of atherosclerosis from endothelial dysfunction to acute occlusive clinical events. We explored activation by exposure to tobacco smoke of two genes, β‐catenin and COX‐2, that play key roles in inflammation and vascular remodeling events. Using both in vivo and in vitro smoke exposure, we determined that tobacco smoke (TS) induced nuclear β‐catenin accumulation and COX‐2 expression and activity and moreover interacted with IL‐1β to enhance these effects. Exposure of cardiac endothelial cells to tobacco smoke plus IL‐1β (TS/IL‐1β ) enhanced permeability of endothelial monolayers and disrupted membrane VE‐cadherin/β‐catenin complexes, decreased β‐catenin phosphoryla‐tion, and increased phosphorylation of GSK‐3β, Akt, and EGFR. Transfection of endothelial cells with β‐catenin‐directed small interferring RNA (siRNA) suppressed TS/IL‐1β‐mediated effects on COX‐2 modulation. Inhibitors of EGFR and phosphatidylinositol‐3‐kinase also abolished both the TS/IL‐1β‐mediated modulation of the Akt/GSK‐3β/β‐catenin pathway and enhancement of COX‐2 expression. Moreover, increased levels of Akt and GSK‐3β phosphorylation, nuclear β‐catenin accumulation, COX‐2 expression, and IL‐1β were observed in cardiovascular tissue of ApoE −/− mice exposed to cigarette smoke daily for 2 wk. Our results suggest a novel mechanism by which cigarette smoking can induce proinflammatory and proatherosclerotic effects in vascular tissue.—Barbieri S. S., Weksler B. B. Tobacco smoke cooperates with interleukin‐1 β to alter β‐catenin trafficking in vascular endothelium resulting in increased permeability and induction of cyclooxygenase‐2 expression in vitro and in vivo. FASEB J. 21, 1831–1843 (2007)

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