Neuroinflammation has been shown to contribute to neurodegenerative and psychiatric disorders such as Alzheimer’s disease and major depression due to the inappropriate release of pro-inflammatory cytokines from activated microglia. The precise molecular events that mediate cytokine release from glia remain unknown but we suggest that the serine/threonine kinase glycogen synthase kinase-3 (GSK-3) may be involved. The aim of this study therefore was to investigate the effect of lipopolysaccharide (LPS) on expression and activity of the GSK-3β isoform in glia, and to assess if GSK-3 mediates the LPS-induced change in inflammatory cytokine levels in culture medium from rat glial-enriched cortical cultures. GSK-3β was expressed in microglia and astrocytes, and stimulation of these cultures with LPS induced an increase in GSK-3β expression and activity, and in pro-inflammatory cytokine levels in culture media. We show that GSK-3 inhibition using a small molecule inhibitor SB216763 or the mood stabiliser lithium chloride reduced the LPS-induced elevated levels of pro-inflammatory cytokines present in culture media from rat glial-enriched cortical cultures. These results demonstrate a role for GSK-3 as a modulator of inflammatory cytokine levels in the brain, and contribute to a mechanistic insight into neurological disorders in which neuroinflammation is a characteristic feature.