Rm. Zwacka et al., ISCHEMIA REPERFUSION INJURY IN THE LIVER OF BALB/C MICE ACTIVATES AP-1 AND NUCLEAR FACTOR KAPPA-B INDEPENDENTLY OF I-KAPPA-B DEGRADATION/, Hepatology, 28(4), 1998, pp. 1022-1030
For many inherited and acquired hepatic diseases, liver transplantatio
n is the only possible therapeutic strategy. Ischemia/reperfusion (I/R
) damage to donor tissue is thought to be one component that may play
a role in the decline of posttransplant tissue function and ultimately
rejection. The transcription factors, AP-1 and nuclear factor kappa B
(NF-kappa B), play important roles in the acute cellular responses to
tissue damage, as well as the inflammatory phase following I/R. We ha
ve found that the DNA binding activity of AP-1 was dramatically increa
sed following warm ischemia at 1 to 3 hours postreperfusion, Induced D
NA binding activity was composed of predominately c-Jun and JunD heter
o- and homodimers as determined by electrophoretic mobility supershift
assays. This increase in AP-1 activity occurred in the absence of sig
nificant changes in the steady-state protein levels of c-Jun and JunB.
Maximal activation of Jun amino-terminal kinase (JNK) occurred within
the 25 to 30 minutes postreperfusion, just before the peak in AP-1 DN
A binding. These findings suggest that phosphorylation may play an imp
ortant role in regulating AP-1 transcriptional complexes. Furthermore,
JunD protein levels slightly increased at 3 hours postreperfusion, co
ncordant with changes in AP-1 DNA binding activity. The activation of
NF-kappa B at 1 hour postreperfusion was independent of proteolytic de
gradation of I kappa B-alpha or I kappa B-beta, This activation of NF-
kappa B DNA binding activity in the nucleus was preceded by an increas
e in tyrosine phosphorylation of I kappa B-alpha. These studies sugges
t that JNK, I kappa B tyrosine kinase, and JunD are potential targets
for therapeutic intervention during liver I/R injury.