Oxytocin activates NF-κB-mediated inflammatory pathways in human gestational tissues

  • Sung Hye Kim
  • , David A. MacIntyre
  • , Maria Firmino Da Silva
  • , Andrew M. Blanks
  • , Yun S. Lee
  • , Steven Thornton
  • , Phillip R. Bennett
  • , Vasso Terzidou*
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal Article peer-review

51 Scopus citations

Abstract

Human labour, both at term and preterm, is preceded by NF-κB-mediated inflammatory activation within the uterus, leading to myometrial activation, fetal membrane remodelling and cervical ripening. The stimuli triggering inflammatory activation in normal human parturition are not fully understood. We show that the neurohypophyseal peptide, oxytocin (OT), activates NF-κB and stimulates downstream inflammatory pathways in human gestational tissues. OT stimulation (1pM-100nM) specifically via its receptor (OTR) in human myometrial and amnion primary cells led to MAPK and NF-κB activation within 15 min and maximal p65-subunit nuclear translocation within 30 min. Both in human myometrium and amnion, OT-induced activation of the canonical NF-κB pathway upregulated key inflammatory labour-associated genes including IL-8, CCL5, IL-6 and COX-2. IKKβ inhibition (TPCA1; 10μM) suppressed OT-induced NF-κB-p65 phosphorylation, whereas p65-siRNA knockdown reduced basal and OT-induced COX-2 levels in myometrium and amnion. In both gestational tissues, MEK1/2 (U0126; 10μM) or p38 inhibition (SB203580; 10μM) suppressed OT-induced COX-2 expression, but OT-induced p65-phosphorylation was only inhibited in amnion, suggesting OT activation of NF-κB in amnion is MAPK-dependent. Our data provide new insight into the OT/OTR system in human parturition and suggest that its therapeutic modulation could be a strategy for regulating both contractile and inflammatory pathways in the clinical context of term/preterm labour.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)64-77
Number of pages14
JournalMolecular and Cellular Endocrinology
Volume403
DOIs
StatePublished - 05 03 2015
Externally publishedYes

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2014 Elsevier Ireland Ltd.

Keywords

  • Amnion
  • Inflammation
  • Myometrium
  • NF-κB
  • Oxytocin
  • Parturition

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