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Lung Biology Laboratory, Departments of 1 Medicine and 2 Pediatrics, Georgetown University School of Medicine, Washington, District of Columbia 20007
Lipopolysaccharide (LPS) treatment increases
survival of rats, but not of mice, during hyperoxia. Manganese
superoxide dismutase (Mn SOD) in the lung plays a critical
role in LPS-induced tolerance to hyperoxia in rats. Therefore, we now
compared the response of lung Mn SOD with treatment of mice and rats
with LPS. LPS treatment of rats increased Mn SOD activity and protein
concentration, did not change its specific activity, increased Mn SOD
mRNA concentration 35-fold, and elevated Mn SOD synthesis 50% without
changing general protein synthesis. LPS treatment of mice did not alter
any of these parameters except for a 16-fold increase in Mn SOD mRNA concentration. Mn SOD translational efficiency (synthesis/mRNA concentration) was diminished 93% in rat lung and 76% in mouse lung
by treatment with LPS. However, the absolute translational efficiency
was twofold higher in lungs of LPS-treated rats than in lungs of
LPS-treated mice. The failure of LPS to raise Mn SOD activity in mouse
lungs is due, at least in part, to a smaller increase in Mn SOD mRNA
and lower translational efficiency in LPS-treated mice than in
LPS-treated rats.
endotoxin; protein synthesis; translational efficiency; rat; mouse
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