In Sertoli epithelial cells, the IL-1 beta induces prostaglandins ( PG) PGE(2), PGF(2 alpha) and PGI(2) (7-, 11-, and 2- fold, respectively), but not PGD(2), production. Cyclohexamide pretreatment inhibiting protein synthesis prevents IL-1 beta increases in PG levels, indicating that induction requires de novo protein synthesis. IL-1 beta-regulated PGE2 and PGF(2 alpha) production and cytokine expression require activation of cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2) and c-Jun NH2-terminal kinase, as shown using specific enzyme inhibition. PGE2 and PGF(2 alpha) stimulate expression of IL-1 alpha, -1 eta, and - 6, findings consistent with PG involvement in IL signaling within the seminiferous tubule. PGE2 and PGF(2 alpha) reverse COX-2-mediated inhibition of IL-1 beta induction of cytokine expression and PG production. Sertoli PG receptor expression was determined; four known E-prostanoid receptor (EP) subtypes (1 - 4) and the F-prostanoid and prostacyclin prostanoid receptors were demonstrated using RNA and protein analyses. Pharmacological characterization of Sertoli PG receptors associated with cytokine regulation was ascertained by quantitative real-time RT-PCR analyses. IL-1 beta regulates both EP2 mRNA and protein levels, data consistent with a regulatory feedback loop. Butaprost ( EP2 agonist) and 11-deoxy PGE(1) (EP2 and EP4 agonist) treatments show that EP2 receptor activation stimulates Sertoli cytokine expression. Consistent with EP2-cAMP signaling, protein kinase A inhibition blocks both IL-1 beta- and PGE2-induced cytokines. Together, the data indicate an autocrine-amplifying loop involving IL-1 beta- regulated Sertoli function mediated by COX-2-induced PGE(2) and PGF(2 alpha) production. PGE2 activates EP2 and/or EP4 receptor(s) and the protein kinase A-cAMP pathway; PGF(2 alpha) activates F-prostanoid receptor-protein kinase C signaling. Further identification of the molecular mechanisms subserving these mediators may offer new insights into physiological events as well as proinflammatory-mediated pathogenesis in the testis.