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1.
Indian J Biochem Biophys ; 2013 Oct; 50(5): 387-401
Article Dans Anglais | IMSEAR | ID: sea-150248

Résumé

The purpose of this study was to elucidate the mechanism of the airborne poultry dust (particulate matter, PM)-induced respiratory tract inflammation, a common symptom in agricultural respiratory diseases. The study was based on the hypothesis that poultry PM would induce the release of inflammatory cytokine interleukin-8 (IL-8) by respiratory epithelial cells under the upstream regulation by cytosolic phospholipase A2 (cPLA2) activation and subsequent formation of cyclooxygenase (COX)- and lipoxygenase (LOX)-catalyzed arachidonic acid (AA) metabolites (eicosanoids). Human lung epithelial cells (A549) in culture were treated with the poultry PM (0.1-1.0 mg) for different lengths of time, following which PLA2 activity, release of eicosanoids and secretion of IL-8 in cells were determined. Poultry PM (1.0 mg/ml) caused a significant activation of PLA2 in a time-dependent manner (15-60 min), which was significantly attenuated by the calcium-chelating agents, cPLA2-specific inhibitor (AACOCF3) and antioxidant (vitamin C) in A549 cells. Poultry PM also significantly induced the release of COX- and LOX-catalyzed eicosanoids (prostaglandins, thromboxane A2 and leukotrienes B4 and C4) and upstream activation of AA LOX in the cells. Poultry PM also significantly induced release of IL-8 by the cells in a dose- and time-dependent manner, which was significantly attenuated by the calcium chelating agents, antioxidants and COX- and LOX-specific inhibitors. The current study for the first time revealed that the poultry PM-induced IL-8 release from the respiratory epithelial cells was regulated upstream by reactive oxygen species, cPLA2-, COX- and LOX-derived eicosanoid lipid signal mediators.


Sujets)
Agriculture , Animaux , Antioxydants/pharmacologie , Acide arachidonique/métabolisme , Acide arachidonique/métabolisme , Biocatalyse , Lignée cellulaire , Cytokines/métabolisme , Relation dose-effet des médicaments , Acide egtazique/analogues et dérivés , Acide egtazique/pharmacologie , Éicosanoïdes/métabolisme , Activation enzymatique/effets des médicaments et des substances chimiques , Antienzymes/pharmacologie , Humains , Inflammation/induit chimiquement , Inflammation/métabolisme , Interleukine-8/métabolisme , Lipoxygénases/métabolisme , Matière particulaire/composition chimique , Matière particulaire/pharmacologie , Cytosolic phospholipases A2/antagonistes et inhibiteurs , Cytosolic phospholipases A2/métabolisme , Volaille , Prostaglandin-endoperoxide synthases/métabolisme , Espèces réactives de l'oxygène/métabolisme , Muqueuse respiratoire/cytologie , Muqueuse respiratoire/métabolisme , Muqueuse respiratoire/métabolisme , Transduction du signal/effets des médicaments et des substances chimiques , Solvants/composition chimique , Facteurs temps
2.
Article Dans Anglais | IMSEAR | ID: sea-138692

Résumé

The increasing focus on airway inflammation in the pathogenesis of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) has led to development and evolution of tools to measure it. Direct assessment of airway inflammation requires invasive procedures, and hence, has obvious limitations. Non-invasive methods to sample airway secretions and fluids offer exciting prospects. Analysis of exhaled breath condensate (EBC) is rapidly emerging as a novel non-invasive approach for sampling airway epithelial lining fluid and offers a convenient tool to provide biomarkers of inflammation. It has definite advantages that make it an attractive and a feasible option. It is a source of mediators and molecules that are the causes or consequences of the inflammatory process. Measurement of such markers is increasingly being explored for studying airway inflammation qualitatively and quantitatively in research studies and for potential clinical applications. These biomarkers also have the potential to develop into powerful research tools in COPD for identifying various pathways of pathogenesis of COPD that may ultimately provide specific targets for therapeutic intervention. The EBC analysis is still an evolving noninvasive method for monitoring of inflammation and oxidative stress in the airways. The limited number of studies available on EBC analysis in COPD have provided useful information although definite clinical uses are yet to be defined. Evolving technologies of genomics, proteomics, and metabonomics may provide deeper and newer insights into the molecular mechanisms underlying the pathogenesis of COPD.


Sujets)
Marqueurs biologiques/métabolisme , Tests d'analyse de l'haleine , Cytokines/métabolisme , Dinoprost/analogues et dérivés , Dinoprost/métabolisme , Éicosanoïdes/métabolisme , Humains , Peroxyde d'hydrogène/métabolisme , Concentration en ions d'hydrogène , Inflammation/complications , Inflammation/métabolisme , Broncho-pneumopathie chronique obstructive/complications , Broncho-pneumopathie chronique obstructive/métabolisme
3.
Braz. j. med. biol. res ; 39(7): 851-861, July 2006. tab, graf
Article Dans Anglais | LILACS | ID: lil-431568

Résumé

Ureases are enzymes from plants, fungi and bacteria that catalyze the hydrolysis of urea to form ammonia and carbon dioxide. While fungal and plant ureases are homo-oligomers of 90-kDa subunits, bacterial ureases are multimers of two or three subunit complexes. We showed that some isoforms of jack bean urease, canatoxin and the classical urease, bind to glycoconjugates and induce platelet aggregation. Canatoxin also promotes release of histamine from mast cells, insulin from pancreatic cells and neurotransmitters from brain synaptosomes. In vivo it induces rat paw edema and neutrophil chemotaxis. These effects are independent of ureolytic activity and require activation of eicosanoid metabolism and calcium channels. Helicobacter pylori, a Gram-negative bacterium that colonizes the human stomach mucosa, causes gastric ulcers and cancer by a mechanism that is not understood. H. pylori produces factors that damage gastric epithelial cells, such as the vacuolating cytotoxin VacA, the cytotoxin-associated protein CagA, and a urease (up to 10 percent of bacterial protein) that neutralizes the acidic medium permitting its survival in the stomach. H. pylori whole cells or extracts of its water-soluble proteins promote inflammation, activate neutrophils and induce the release of cytokines. In this paper we review data from the literature suggesting that H. pylori urease displays many of the biological activities observed for jack bean ureases and show that bacterial ureases have a secretagogue effect modulated by eicosanoid metabolites through lipoxygenase pathways. These findings could be relevant to the elucidation of the role of urease in the pathogenesis of the gastrointestinal disease caused by H. pylori.


Sujets)
Humains , Animaux , Canavalia/enzymologie , Éicosanoïdes/métabolisme , Infections à Helicobacter/microbiologie , Helicobacter pylori/enzymologie , Protéines végétales/biosynthèse , Urease/biosynthèse , Relation dose-effet des médicaments , Maladies du duodénum/métabolisme , Maladies du duodénum/microbiologie , Infections à Helicobacter/métabolisme , Maladies de l'estomac/métabolisme , Maladies de l'estomac/microbiologie
4.
Mem. Inst. Oswaldo Cruz ; 100(supl.1): 49-54, Mar. 2005. ilus, graf
Article Dans Anglais | LILACS | ID: lil-402175

Résumé

Aspirin has always remained an enigmatic drug. Not only does it present with new benefits for treating an ever-expanding list of apparently unrelated diseases at an astounding rate but also because aspirin enhances our understanding of the nature of these diseases processe. Originally, the beneficial effects of aspirin were shown to stem from its inhibition of cyclooxygenase-derived prostaglandins, fatty acid metabolites that modulate host defense. However, in addition to inhibiting cyclooxygenase activity aspirin can also inhibit pro-inflammatory signaling pathways, gene expression and other factors distinct from eicosanoid biosynthesis that drive inflammation as well as enhance the synthesis of endogenous protective anti-inflammatory factors. Its true mechanism of action in anti-inflammation remains unclear. Here the data from a series of recent experiments proposing that one of aspirin's predominant roles in inflammation is the induction of nitric oxide, which potently inhibits leukocyte/endothelium interaction during acute inflammation, will be discussed. It will be argued that this nitric oxide-inducing effects are exclusive to aspirin due to its unique ability, among the family of traditional anti-inflammatory drugs, to acetylate the active site of inducible cyclooxygenase and generate a family of lipid mediators called the epi-lipoxins that are increasingly being shown to have profound roles in a range of host defense responses.


Sujets)
Animaux , Humains , Anti-inflammatoires non stéroïdiens/pharmacologie , Acide acétylsalicylique/pharmacologie , Médiateurs de l'inflammation/métabolisme , Inflammation/traitement médicamenteux , Lipoxines/biosynthèse , Monoxyde d'azote/métabolisme , Maladie aigüe , Éicosanoïdes/métabolisme , Inflammation/métabolisme
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