Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:1.14.99.3 (heme oxygenase)
4,196 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Recent studies strongly suggest that oxidative stresses participate in ischemia/reperfusion-induced neurodegeneration. In addition, heme oxygenase (HO) and major histocompatibility complex (MHC) antigens serve as functional molecules against oxidative stress and as self-recognition markers in the immune system, respectively. In this study, we examined the induction of HO and MHC antigens in the rat hippocampus after transient forebrain ischemia. The protein level of HO-1 was significantly enhanced after an episode of ischemia. After ischemia, HO-1 expression was observed early but transiently in the CA1 pyramidal neurons and later but continuously in glial cells. Glial cells expressing HO-1 were predominantly ameboid microglia, but not astrocytes. Ameboid microglia expressing HO-1 were predominantly localized with MHC class II antigens. These results indicate that (1) HO-1 expression in CA1 pyramidal neurons may be harmful, and (2) ischemia induces HO-1 in ameboid microglia that express MHC class II antigens, indicating a very specific microglial stress protein response.
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PMID:Induction of heme oxygenase-1 and major histocompatibility complex antigens in transient forebrain ischemia. 970 43

Maintenance of hepatic microcirculatory flow after ischemia of the liver is essential to prevent hepatic dysfunction. Thus, we determined the differential role of carbon monoxide (CO) and nitric oxide (NO) in the intrinsic control of sinusoidal perfusion, mitochondrial redox state, and bile production in the isolated perfused rat liver after hemorrhagic shock. Administration of tin protoporphyrin-IX (50 microM), a specific inhibitor of the CO generating enzyme heme oxygenase, caused a decrease in sinusoidal flow that was more pronounced after shock compared with sham shock, as determined by in situ epifluorescence microscopy. This was associated with a shift in hepatocellular redox potential to a more reduced state (increased fluorescence intensity of reduced pyridine nucleotides in hepatocytes, decreased acetoacetate/beta-hydroxybutyrate ratio in the perfusate) and a profound reduction in bile flow. In sharp contrast, the preferential inhibitor of the inducible isoform of NO synthase S-methylisothiourea sulfate (100 microM) did not affect sinusoidal flow, hepatic redox state, or function. This indicates that 1.) endogenously generated CO preserves sinusoidal perfusion after hemorrhagic shock, 2.) protection of the hepatic microcirculation by CO may serve to limit shock-induced liver dysfunction, and 3.) in contrast to CO, inducible NO synthase-derived NO is of only minor importance for the intrinsic control of hepatic perfusion and function under these conditions.
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PMID:Protective role of endogenous carbon monoxide in hepatic microcirculatory dysfunction after hemorrhagic shock in rats. 973 56

Carbon monoxide (CO) is an endogenously generated gas that may play an important physiological role in the circulation. CO is generated by vascular cells as a byproduct of heme catabolism, in which heme oxygenase (HO) catalyzes the degradation of heme to biliverdin, iron and CO. Two distinct isoforms of HO have been identified in vascular tissue. The HO-2 isoform is constitutively expressed and likely mediates the release of CO under normal physiologic conditions. In contrast, the HO-1 isoform is strongly induced in vascular cells by various stress-associated agents and markedly increases CO synthesis during pathological conditions. The release of CO by vascular cells exerts both paracrine and autocrine effects on vascular smooth muscle cells (SMC) and circulating blood cells. CO regulates blood flow and blood fluidity by inhibiting vasomotor tone, SMC proliferation, and platelet aggregation. These vascular effects of CO are mediated via the activation of soluble guanylate cyclase and the consequent rise in intracellular guanosine 3',5'-cyclic monophosphate levels in target tissues. CO may also play a role in various cardiovascular disorders, including endotoxin shock, ischemia-reperfusion, hypertension, and subarachnoid hemorrhage. This review will focus on the recent progress made in understanding the regulation and function of CO in the vasculature.
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PMID:Carbon monoxide and vascular cell function (review). 985 96

We investigated whether the expression of heme oxygenase (HO) isozymes was related to the occurrence of ventricular fibrillation (VF) induced by ischemia/reperfusion in nondiabetic and diabetic myocardium. To study the role of HO-1 and HO-2 mRNA expression in VF, isolated hearts obtained from nondiabetic and 8-week diabetic rats were subjected to 30 min of ischemia followed by 2 h of reperfusion. Expression of HO-1 and HO-2 mRNA was studied in fibrillated and nonfibrillated myocardium using Northern blotting and reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR). The effect of zinc protoporphyrin IX (Zn-PPIX), a potent inhibitor of HO activity, on HO activity was also studied in ischemic/reperfused hearts. Upon reperfusion, an expression of HO-1 was observed in nonfibrillated myocardium. HO-1 mRNA expression was significantly reduced in hearts showed VF. Zn-PPIX (5 microM) treatment reduced HO activity from its control values of 398+/-27 (in nondiabetics) and 370+/-20 pmol bilirubin/h (in diabetics) to 69+/-14 (in nondiabetics, p<.05) and 60+/-11 pmol bilirubin/h (in diabetics, p<.05), respectively, and all hearts, upon reperfusion, showed VF in both nondiabetic and diabetic subjects. HO-2 expression was unchanged in nonfibrillated and fibrillated myocardium. Postischemic function showed no correlation with the expression of these genes. Our data show that the mechanism(s) of ischemia/reperfusion-induced VF involves the downregulation of HO-1 mRNA and a reduction in HO activity. Furthermore, the mechanism(s) of VF at molecular level involving HO isozymes does not show a significant difference between nondiabetics and diabetics.
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PMID:Heme oxygenase and cardiac function in ischemic/reperfused rat hearts. 1044 28

This study aimed to examine whether an elevated activity of heme oxygenase (HO)-1 in the tissue attenuates endothelial cell-leukocyte interactions microvessels in vivo. When rats were pretreated with an intraperitoneal injection of hemin, an HO-1 inducer, mesenteric tissues, including their microvessels, displayed a marked induction of HO-1 concurrent with an increase in plasma concentrations of bilirubin-IXalpha, the product of HO-catalyzed degradation of protoheme IX. In these rats, oxidative stress such as superfusion with H(2)O(2) and ischemia-reperfusion of the tissues neither induced rolling nor exhibited adherent responses of leukocytes in venules. In contrast, the oxidative stresses evoked marked rolling and adhesion of leukocytes in the control rats without HO-1 induction. The HO-1 induction also downregulated leukocyte adhesion elicited by other pro-oxidant stimuli such as N(omega)-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester. The decreases in the oxidant-elicited leukocyte adhesive responses under HO-1-inducing conditions were restored by perfusion with zinc protoporphyrin-IX, an HO inhibitor, but not with copper protoporphyrin-IX, which did not inhibit the enzyme. Furthermore, the effects of zinc protoporphyrin-IX were repressed by superfusion with bilirubin or biliverdin at the micromolar level, but not by the same concentration of carbon monoxide, another product of HO. These results indicate that induction of the HO-1 activity serves as a potential stratagem to prevent oxidant-induced microvascular leukocyte adhesion through the action of bilirubin, a product of HO reaction.
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PMID:Induction of heme oxygenase-1 suppresses venular leukocyte adhesion elicited by oxidative stress: role of bilirubin generated by the enzyme. 1052 Dec 39

In mammals the rate-limiting step in heme catabolism is the heme oxygenase (HO) system. Two isozymes, HO-1 and HO-2, oxidatively cleave the substrate to form biliverdin, and the potential cellular messenger, CO; the chelated iron is released as the result of the tetrapyrrole ring opening. Biliverdin is subsequently reduced to bilirubin, an antioxidant, by biliverdin reductase. The aim of the present study was to investigate the involvement of HO-1, a heat shock/stress protein, in protection offered by the spin trap agent, N-tert-butyl-alpha-phenyl-nitrone (PBN), against kidney ischemia/reperfusion injury. For this, HO-1 expression and assessment of the parameters associated with tissue-oxidative injury were compared in the presence or absence of PBN pretreatment of rats (100 mg/kg i.p., 30 min) before the onset of 30-min ischemia. Twenty-four hours after reperfusion, Northern blot analysis showed an unprecedented approximately 37-fold increase in 1.8-kb HO-1 mRNA in PBN pretreated rat kidney; HO-2 mRNA levels did not increase. At 48 h, the levels of HO-1 mRNA remained nearly 14-fold higher than the control value. In the absence of PBN, the levels measured approximately 5- and 2-fold higher than control values at the 24- and 48-h intervals, respectively. PBN pretreatment also resulted in a most impressive increase in the levels of HO-1 protein as judged by Western blot analysis and measurement of enzyme activity at the 24-h time point. As detected by immunohistochemical analysis, PBN pretreatment caused an increase in HO-1 and biliverdin reductase-immunoreactive proteins in the cortex and in the outer stripe of the outer medulla. In the absence of PBN pretreatment, there was an intense immunostaining for HO-1 in the medullary rays, which corresponded with iron and lipid peroxidation staining of the region; these observations were not made with PBN-pretreated kidneys. Collectively, the findings are consistent with the likelihood that suprainduction of HO-1 gene expression protects the kidney from free radical-mediated injury by increasing the capacity to produce the potent cellular antioxidant bilirubin. We also suggest spin trap-mediated protection against ischemia/reperfusion injury is likely due to a sustained elevation of HO-1 gene expression by formation of stable radicals.
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PMID:Spin trap (N-t-butyl-alpha-phenylnitrone)-mediated suprainduction of heme oxygenase-1 in kidney ischemia/reperfusion model: role of the oxygenase in protection against oxidative injury. 1052 16

Sublethal hyperthermia and the following recovery from this heat exposure, referred to as hyperthermic preconditioning, elicits a transient state of tolerance to oxidative insults through an intracellular protective response: stress response. The impact of hyperthermic preconditioning on hepatic microcirculatory disturbance, which is one of the determinants of ischemia/reperfusion-induced injury of the liver, was investigated by using intravital fluorescence microscopy. Thirty minutes of ischemia and a subsequent 120 minutes of reperfusion was induced in an in situ isolated perfusion model of Sprague-Dawley rats. Heat stress was given by whole-body hyperthermia, and a subsequent recovery was allowed for 18 or 48 hours, respectively. Postischemic decrease in sinusoidal perfusion rate and sinusoidal diameter, leukocyte stagnation in sinusoids, and leukocyte adhesion in postsinusoidal venules were significantly attenuated in both hyperthermia-pretreated groups. A recovery of bile production, a reduction of liver enzyme release, and an attenuation of tissue edema and histological damage were also observed. A marked expression of heat shock protein (HSP) 70 and heme oxygenase (HO-1)/HSP32 was correlatively observed in the liver tissue coincident with the induction of these protective effects. Hyperthermic preconditioning provides a continuous long-term and constant inhibitory effect (up to 48 hours after heat exposure) on postischemic injury of the liver through the attenuation of microcirculatory disturbances. These beneficial effects might be associated with a concomitant increase in HSP70 and HO-1/HSP32 expression.
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PMID:Impact of hyperthermic preconditioning on postischemic hepatic microcirculatory disturbances in an isolated perfusion model of the rat liver. 1065 64

Bilirubin is a potent antioxidant generated intracellularly during the degradation of heme by the enzyme heme oxygenase. The purpose of this study was to determine the role of increased cardiac bilirubin in protection against postischemic myocardial dysfunction. Rat hearts were isolated and perfused according to the Langendorff technique to evaluate the recovery of myocardial function after 30 min of global ischemia and 60 min of reperfusion. We found that upregulation of the inducible isoform of heme oxygenase (HO-1) by treatment of animals with hemin 24 h before ischemia ameliorated myocardial function and reduced infarct size (tetrazolium staining) on reperfusion of isolated hearts. Tin protoporphyrin IX, an inhibitor of heme oxygenase activity, completely abolished the improved postischemic myocardial performance observed after hemin-mediated HO-1 induction. Likewise, cardiac tissue injury was exacerbated by treatment with tin protoporphyrin IX. Increased cardiac HO-1 expression and heme oxygenase activity were associated with enhanced tissue bilirubin content and an increased rate of bilirubin release into the perfusion buffer. Furthermore, exogenously administered bilirubin at concentrations as low as 100 nanomolar significantly restored myocardial function and minimized both infarct size and mitochondrial damage on reperfusion. Our data provide strong evidence for a primary role of HO-1-derived bilirubin in cardioprotection against reperfusion injury.
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PMID:Heme oxygenase-1-derived bilirubin ameliorates postischemic myocardial dysfunction. 1066 97

Sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS) occurs silently usually during sleep and, though remaining unexplained after autopsy, leaves footprints creating a pattern analogous to that which follows a flood of nitric acid (NO). These footprints in SIDS are associated with serious pathological changes, viz. elevated hepatic iron, bone marrow hyperplasia, hypomyelinated respiratory control centres, elevated lung immunoglobulins, cerebral hypoperfusion resembling lesions induced by chronic hypoxemia, ischemia, congenital heart disease and congenital myopathy. Hypoxia stimulates the immune response and the over-arousal of the immune response triggers a flood of NO. Adenosine triggers sleep. NO and adenosine are additive as dilators of coronary blood vessels. Blood pressure collapses. Selenium increases the activity of the enzyme ferrochelatase during incorporation of heme into cytochrome oxidase. NO binds to cytochrome oxidase, inhibiting respiration. When NO reaches dangerous levels, the cell turns on production of heme oxygenase. Heme is broken down to iron (Fe) carbon monoxide (CO) and bile pigments. NO has a huge affinity for hemoglobin which catalyses NO degradation to nitrate. Furthermore, NO is a product of smoke and SIDS incidence is higher in smoking mothers.
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PMID:Association of sudden infant death syndrome with grossly deranged iron metabolism and nitric oxide overload. 1079 Jul 39

We have assessed the relationship between reperfusion-induced ventricular fibrillation (VF) and heme oxygenase (HO) mRNA expression using northern blotting, reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR), and enzyme activity in isolated working ischemic/reperfused rat hearts. Isolated hearts were subjected to 30 min of global ischemia followed by 120 min of reperfusion. Upon reperfusion with VF, cardiac function was registered (n = 6 in each group), and HO mRNAs and enzyme activities were measured at the end of reperfusion in hearts that showed VF or did not develop VF. The expression of HO-1 mRNA (about fourfold) was observed in ischemic/reperfused nonfibrillated myocardium in comparison with the nonischemic control hearts. In those hearts when VF was developed, the expression of HO-1 mRNA was not observed in comparison with the nonischemic control myocardium. The results measured by RT-PCR and enzyme analysis support the data obtained by northern blotting. In additional studies, we decided to approach the question from a different angle. Thus, the purpose of our work was also to study the role of HO expression and enzyme activity in electrically fibrillated hearts without the ischemic/reperfused protocol. To simulate the period of 10 min of reperfusion-induced VF, hearts were electrically fibrillated, then defibrillated, and perfused for an additional 110 min, and HO-1 mRNA expression and enzyme activities were determined. Thus, electrically induced VF resulted in about 60%, 60%, and 70% reduction in HO-1 mRNA expression, RT-PCR signal intensity, and enzyme activity, respectively, compared with the nonfibrillated ischemic/reperfused group. In conclusion, our data provide evidence that the development of reperfusion-induced VF inhibits HO-1 mRNA expression and enzyme activity in both electrically fibrillated myocardium and ischemic/reperfused fibrillated hearts. The results clearly show that HO-1 mRNA expression and enzyme activity were increased in ischemic/reperfused nonfibrillated myocardium, suggesting that interventions that are able to increase HO-1 mRNA expression and enzyme activity may prevent the development of VF.
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PMID:Regulation of ventricular fibrillation by heme oxygenase in ischemic/reperfused hearts. 1129 91


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