Bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS) is a major inducer of systemic inflammatory reactions and oxidative stress in response to microbial infections and may cause sepsis. In the present study, we demonstrate that retinoic acid inhibits LPS-induced activation in transgenic reporter mice and human monoblasts through inhibition of nuclear factor kappaB (NF-kappaB). By using noninvasive molecular imaging of NF-kappaB luciferase reporter mice, we showed that administration of retinoic acid repressed LPS-induced whole-body luminescence, demonstrating in vivo the dynamics of retinoic acid's ability to repress physiologic response to LPS. Retinoic acid also inhibited LPS-induced NF-kappaB activity in the human myeloblastic cell line U937. Retinoic-acid-receptor-selective agonists mimicked - while specific antagonists inhibited - the effects of retinoic acid, suggesting the involvement of nuclear retinoic acid receptors. Retinoic acid also repressed LPS-induced transcription of NF-kappaB target genes such as IL-6, MCP-1 and COX-2. The effect of retinoic acid was dependent on new protein synthesis, was obstructed by a deacetylase inhibitor and was partly eliminated by a signal transducer and activator of transcription-1 (STAT1)/methyltransferase inhibitor, indicating that retinoic acid induces a new protein, possibly STAT1, that is involved in inhibiting NF-kappaB. This provides more evidence for retinoic acid's anti-inflammatory potential, which may have clinical implications in terms of fighting microbial infections.