Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:1.5.1.19 (NOS)
7,285 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Reactive oxygen species (ROS) are produced in ischemia and reperfusion. Since endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS) is key to the endothelium-dependent vasodilation, we examined the effects of peroxide on this enzyme. We treated cells cultured from pig coronary artery endothelium with different concentrations of hydrogen peroxide, washed them, solubilized them and measured NOS activity by arginine to citrulline conversion. Hydrogen peroxide inhibited the eNOS activity with an IC50 value of 0.85 +/- 0.39 mM. In another experiment, we perfused arteries with solutions containing 0 or 1 mM hydrogen peroxide, washed them, removed the endothelium using a cotton swab, centrifuged and solubilized the endothelium and monitored its NOS activity. Hydrogen peroxide (1 mM) did not affect the NOS activity significantly (p > 0.05) in this assay. We conclude that the inactivation of eNOS by hydrogen peroxide does not play a major role in the ischemia-reperfusion damage because the peroxide concentrations attained during ischemia-perfusion are much lower than those affecting the eNOS activity.
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PMID:Effects of peroxide on endothelial nitric oxide synthase in coronary arteries. 965 89

Liver transplantation (Ltx) has become a routine procedure for patients with end-stage liver disease. Despite ongoing progress on short- and long-term graft survival, primary dysfunction (PDF) remains a major problem. PDF is significantly associated with the duration of cold ischemia- and, possibly, with reperfusion-related injury. Nitric oxide (NO) has many physiological functions and plays an important role in modulating tissue injury. However, the mechanism of NO action in ischemia/reperfusion injury after Ltx is thus far unknown. In this study we investigated the role of inducable NO synthase (iNOS) in the liver after preservation with UW solution using the orthotopic Ltx model in the rat. Male Brown Norway rats were used for the Ltx procedure. After donor hepatectomy, livers were stored on ice-cold UW solution for 24 or 40 h and subsequently transplanted. A control group consisted of rats with Ltx after less than 1 h storage. Post-transplant blood samples were taken at 48 h to determine standard parameters for liver injury (aspartate transaminase, lactate dehydrogenase). Liver biopsies were obtained for detection of expression of iNOS (western blot) 24 and 48 h post-transplant. We observed that a preservation time of 24 h in UW solution presents no problem for graft survival after Ltx in rats with some brain function and in healthy animals. After 40 h preservation, liver damage is obvious and graft survival reduced, indicating the limits of cold storage may be within reach. With longer preservation times, more NOs was detected in liver tissue. This finding suggests that NO has a role in ischemia/reperfusion-related injury. Current intervention with NOS inhibitors will reveal whether NO has a negative or a positive effect on graft survival after Ltx.
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PMID:Extended preservation and effect of nitric oxide production in liver transplantation. 966 72

Neuronal-type nitric oxide synthase (NOS I) is involved in ischemia-induced brain damage, and glucocorticoids have been reported to protect from brain damage. This prompted us to investigate if the activity or expression of NOS I was influenced by glucocorticoids. We used the murine neuroblastoma cell line N1E-115 as our experimental model. Short-term incubation (30 min) of the N1E-115 cells with dexamethasone (10 nM to 1 microM) or hydrocortisone (100 nM to 10 microM) did not change the enzymatic activity of NOS I. However, the glucocorticoids inhibited NOS I mRNA expression in a concentration-dependent fashion (down to 53.3 +/- 2. 5% of control). In time-course experiments with 100 nM dexamethasone, maximum down-regulation of NOS I mRNA was seen after 24 hr (55.6 +/- 6.3% of control). Similar effects were seen with 10 microM hydrocortisone. The effect of 100 nM dexamethasone was completely reversed by 1 microM of the glucocorticoid receptor antagonist mifepristone. In experiments with actinomycin D (10 microg/ml), the half-life of the NOS I mRNA was determined to be approximately 12 hr and remained unchanged after glucocorticoid incubation. Nuclear run-on analyses indicated that the decrease in NOS I mRNA was the result of a glucocorticoid-induced inhibition of NOS I gene transcription. In Western blots, the 160-kDa NOS I protein band was down-regulated to 68.5 +/- 8.4% of control after an incubation of the N1E-115 cells with 100 nM dexamethasone for 26 hr. Similarly, NO production was down-regulated to 57.8 +/- 8.7% of control. These data demonstrate that glucocorticoids reduce the expression of NOS I without changing its activity.
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PMID:Expressional down-regulation of neuronal-type nitric oxide synthase I by glucocorticoids in N1E-115 neuroblastoma cells. 968 66

The vasodilator nitric oxide (NO) is involved in the regulation of systemic blood pressure and local organ blood flow. Inhibitors of the constitutively expressed nitric oxide synthase in endothelial cells (eNOS), e.g., Nomega-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester hydrochloride (L-NAME), aggravated liver injury in a variety of models. On the other hand, inhibitors of the inducible NOS (iNOS), e.g., 2-aminoethyl-isothiourea (AET), were found to be beneficial during endotoxemia. The aim of this investigation was to study the effect of AET compared with L-NAME on liver microvascular blood flow and injury in more complex models with multiple insults, i.e., ischemia (20 min)-reperfusion (8 h) in combination with .5 mg/kg endotoxin (IRE). Male Fisher rats were treated with 10 mg/kg AET or L-NAME and subjected to IRE. At 8 h, liver injury (plasma ALT: 1320+/-164 U/L) was significantly increased in AET-treated (5,018+/-1,379 U/L) and L-NAME-treated groups (2,429+/-228 U/L). Each inhibitor attenuated microvascular blood flow (assessed by laser Doppler flowmetry) to a similar degree. In striking contrast, AET completely reversed the endotoxin-induced impairment of the microvascular blood flow and significantly protected against an endotoxin-induced liver injury (plasma ALT: 3,007+/-268 U/L (ET); 460+/-39 U/L (ET+AET)). Infusion of endothelin-1 reduced microvascular blood flow by 50-60% and caused liver injury. Our data demonstrated that an inhibitor of eNOS (L-NAME) has a consistent detrimental effect on liver injury during ischemia-reperfusion and endotoxemia mainly because it can cause additional ischemia by reducing the microvascular blood flow. However, selective inhibitors of iNOS (AET) can impair hepatic blood flow and aggravate the injury or improve blood flow and attenuate organ injury depending on the experimental model. These results suggest that iNOS inhibitors may not be universally beneficial and should be tested in a variety of experimental models of sepsis/endotoxemia before used in clinical settings.
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PMID:Differential effect of 2-aminoethyl-isothiourea, an inhibitor of the inducible nitric oxide synthase, on microvascular blood flow and organ injury in models of hepatic ischemia-reperfusion and endotoxemia. 968 86

The inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) gene is expressed by hepatocytes in a number of physiologic and pathophysiologic conditions affecting the liver including septic and hemorrhagic shock. The molecular regulation of iNOS expression is complex and occurs at multiple levels in the gene expression pathway. The cytokines TNF-alpha, IL-1beta, and INF-gamma synergistically activate iNOS expression in the liver, and the human iNOS gene was first cloned from cytokine-stimulated hepatocytes. iNOS expression requires the transcription factor NF-kappaB and is down-regulated by steroids, TGF-beta, the heat shock response, p53, and nitric oxide (NO) itself. In vivo, hepatic iNOS induction is differentially regulated from the typical acute-phase reactants and is not expressed as a mandatory component of the acute phase response. Thus, numerous mechanisms have evolved to regulate iNOS expression during hepatocellular injury. Studies of the effects of NO in the liver demonstrate that induced NO synthesis plays an important role in hepatocyte function and protects the liver during sepsis and ischemia reperfusion. Its cytoprotective role is best exemplified in a rodent model of endotoxemia. Here the addition of the nonspecific NOS inhibitors significantly increased hepatic damage. NO exerts a protective effect through its ability to prevent intravascular thrombosis by inhibiting platelet adhesion and neutralizing toxic oxygen radicals. NO also exerts a protective effects both in vivo and in vitro by blocking TNF-alpha-induced apoptosis and hepatotoxicity, in part by a thiol-dependent inhibition of caspase-3-like protease activity. These studies demonstrate the cytoprotective effects of NO in the liver and suggest hepatic iNOS expression functions as an adaptive response to minimize inflammatory injury. In addition, NO has anti-tumor effects as well as known mutagenic effects, is involved in the systemic vasodilatation of cirrhosis, and has potent antimicrobial properties.
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PMID:Inducible nitric oxide synthase in the liver: regulation and function. 972 29

The effects of chronic 17beta-estradiol (E2) depletion, via ovariectomy (OVX), and its repletion, on cortical cerebral blood flow (CBF) and EEG activities during forebrain ischemia, as well as post-ischemic recovery and neuropathology, were assessed and compared with results obtained in normal female rats. We also examined whether neuronal nitric oxide synthase (nNOS) activity is affected by OVX and E2 replacement and whether NOS-derived NO supports vasodilation during ischemia. OVX females displayed a significantly lower CBF during ischemia (10% of baseline) than did normal females (23% of baseline). In OVX rats, given chronic low-dose E2 treatment (0.1 mg kg(-1) day(-1)), intra-ischemic CBF was similar to normal females (25% of baseline). However, at supraphysiologic E2 doses (> or = 0.5 mg kg(-1) day(-1)), that benefit was diminished or lost. Intra-ischemic EEG power reductions and post-ischemic survival rates, neurological dysfunction, and histopathology displayed similar relative differences among groups as the CBF findings. Intra-ischemic CBF was reduced by nNOS inhibition, with ARL 17477, in normal and low-dose E2-treated OVX rats (4-8% baseline). The repressed intra-ischemic vasodilating function in OVX rats may be due to reductions in nNOS activity, because untreated OVX rats showed a 50% lower cortical nNOS activity than that in normal rats and in rats treated with low or high dose (5 mg kg(-1) day(-1)) E2. However, the inability to restore vasodilating function despite normalization of nNOS activity indicates that another mechanism is responsible for the repression of vasodilatory function in the high-dose group. These findings suggest that E2, at levels within the physiological range, promotes ischemic neuroprotection via improving vasodilating capacity. One possible mechanism may relate to E2 enhancing brain nNOS expression and activity.
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PMID:Cerebral vasodilating capacity during forebrain ischemia: effects of chronic estrogen depletion and repletion and the role of neuronal nitric oxide synthase. 983 65

Ischemic preconditioning (PC) occurs in two phases: an early phase, which lasts 2-3 h, and a late phase, which begins 12-24 h later and lasts 3-4 days. The mechanism for the late phase of PC has been the focus of intense investigation. We have recently proposed the "NO hypothesis of late PC", which postulates that NO plays a prominent role both in initiating and in mediating this cardioprotective response. The purpose of this essay is to review the evidence supporting the NO hypothesis of late PC and to discuss its implications. We propose that, on day 1, a brief ischemic stress causes increased production of NO (probably via eNOS) and .O2-, which then react to form ONOO-, ONOO-, in turn, activates the epsilon isoform of protein kinase C (PKC), either directly or via its reactive byproducts such as .OH. Both NO and secondary species derived from .O2- could also stimulate PKC epsilon independently. PKC epsilon activation triggers a complex signaling cascade that involves tyrosine kinases (among which Src and Lck appear to be involved) and probably other kinases, the transcription factor NF-kappa B, and most likely other as yet unknown components, resulting in increased transcription of the iNOS gene and increased iNOS activity on day 2, which is responsible for the protection during the second ischemic challenge. Tyrosine kinases also appear to be involved on day 2, possibly by modulating iNOS activity. According to this paradigm, NO plays two completely different roles in late PC: on day 1, it initiates the development of this response, whereas on day 2, it protects against myocardial ischemia. We propose that two different NOS isoforms are sequentially involved in late PC, with eNOS generating the NO that initiates the development of the PC response on day 1 and iNOS then generating the NO that protects against recurrent ischemia on day 2. The NO hypothesis of late PC puts forth a comprehensive paradigm that can explain both the initiation and the mediation of this complex phenomenon. Besides its pathophysiological implications, this hypothesis has potential clinical reverberations, since NO donors (i.e., nitrates) are widely used clinically and could be used to protect the ischemic myocardium in patients.
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PMID:The nitric oxide hypothesis of late preconditioning. 993 90

In this study, the N-Methyl-D-Aspartate (NMDA) receptor-dependent nitric oxide and cyclic GMP (cGMP) synthesis in the course of reperfusion after 5 min of ischemia in gerbil brain hemispheres and cerebellum were investigated. Moreover, the role of the neuronal isoform of nitric oxide (NO) synthase (nNOS) in liberation of NO in postischemic brain and the involvement of NO in membrane lipoperoxidations activated during reperfusion were evaluated. Enhancement of Ca2+/calmodulin-regulated NOS activity and cGMP level in brain hemispheres and in cerebellum during reperfusion was found to be coupled to the activation of the NMDA receptor. cGMP concentration 40% above the control level was observed to persist up to 7 days after ischemia. The amount of conjugated double bounds in membrane lipids and the level of thiobarbituric acid reactive substances were increased exclusively in brain hemispheres, indicating activation of lipid peroxidation. The NMDA receptor antagonist, MK-801, eliminated, and a rather selective nNOS inhibitor, 7-Nitroindazole (7-NI) attenuated, NMDA receptor-evoked enhancement of NOS activity and cGMP level in brain hemispheres and in cerebellum during reperfusion. Moreover, 7-NI decreased significantly membrane lipid peroxidation during the early time of reperfusion. Histological examination demonstrated that 7-NI protects against death a selected population of neuronal cells in CA1 layer of hippocampus. It is suggested that NMDA receptor dependence of NO release during reperfusion is responsible for the degeneration of some populations of neurons and that the effect is mediated by activation of free radical formation and lipid peroxidation. Moreover, in cerebellum, ischemia-evoked activation of glutamatergic system stimulates NO-dependent signal transmission. Our results indicated that 7-NI has a significant ameliorating effect on biochemical alterations evoked by ischemia, suggesting nNOS inhibitors as a potential therapeutic agents in reperfusion injury.
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PMID:NMDA receptor-dependent nitric oxide and cGMP synthesis in brain hemispheres and cerebellum during reperfusion after transient forebrain ischemia in gerbils: effect of 7-Nitroindazole. 984 59

Electrical stimulation of the cerebellar fastigial nucleus (FN) in rat protects the brain against ischemia. We studied whether FN could reduce the cerebrovascular inflammation as a mechanism of protection. FN or dentate nucleus (sham controls) was electrically stimulated for 1 h, and 72 h later rats were either injected with interleukin (IL)-1beta into the striata or processed to analyze inflammatory responses in isolated brain microvessels. In striata, IL-1beta induced a recruitment of leukocytes that was reduced by 50% by FN stimulation. In isolated microvessels, IL-1beta induced the transient and dose-dependent upregulation of the mRNAs encoding for the inducible nitric oxide synthase (NOS-2), intercellular adhesion molecule 1 (ICAM-1), and inhibitory kappaB-alpha (IkappaB-alpha), an inhibitor of nuclear factor-kappaB. FN stimulation decreased the upregulation of NOS-2 and ICAM-1 mRNAs, whereas it increased IkappaB-alpha mRNA expression. Dentate nucleus stimulation did not mimic the FN actions. These findings suggest that FN stimulation may render brain microvessels refractory to IL-1beta by overproduction of IkappaB-alpha and support the hypothesis that alteration of microvascular inflammation may contribute to the central neurogenic neuroprotection elicited from the FN.
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PMID:Stimulation of cerebellar fastigial nucleus inhibits interleukin-1beta-induced cerebrovascular inflammation. 984 4

Brain ischemia initiates a complex cascade of metabolic events, several of which involve the generation of nitrogen and oxygen free radicals. These free radicals and related reactive chemical species mediate much of damage that occurs after transient brain ischemia, and in the penumbral region of infarcts caused by permanent ischemia. Nitric oxide, a water- and lipid-soluble free radical, is generated by the action of nitric oxide synthases. Ischemia causes a surge in nitric oxide synthase 1 (NOS 1) activity in neurons and, possibly, glia, increased NOS 3 activity in vascular endothelium, and later an increase in NOS 2 activity in a range of cells including infiltrating neutrophils and macrophages, activated microglia and astrocytes. The effects of ischemia on the activity of NOS 1, a Ca2+-dependent enzyme, are thought to be secondary to reversal of glutamate reuptake at synapses, activation of NMDA receptors, and resulting elevation of intracellular Ca2+. The up-regulation of NOS 2 activity is mediated by transcriptional inducers. In the context of brain ischemia, the activity of NOS 1 and NOS 2 is broadly deleterious, and their inhibition or inactivation is neuroprotective. However, the production of nitric oxide in blood vessels by NOS 3, which, like NOS 1, is Ca2+-dependent, causes vasodilatation and improves blood flow in the penumbral region of brain infarcts. In addition to causing the synthesis of nitric oxide, brain ischemia leads to the generation of superoxide, through the action of nitric oxide synthases, xanthine oxidase, leakage from the mitochondrial electron transport chain, and other mechanisms. Nitric oxide and superoxide are themselves highly reactive but can also combine to form a highly toxic anion, peroxynitrite. The toxicity of the free radicals and peroxynitrite results from their modification of macromolecules, especially DNA, and from the resulting induction of apoptotic and necrotic pathways. The mode of cell death that prevails probably depends on the severity and precise nature of the ischemic injury. Recent studies have emphasized the role of peroxynitrite in causing single-strand breaks in DNA, which activate the DNA repair protein poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP). This catalyzes the cleavage and thereby the consumption of NAD+, the source of energy for many vital cellular processes. Over-activation of PARP, with resulting depletion of NAD+, has been shown to make a major contribution to brain damage after transient focal ischemia in experimental animals. Neuronal accumulation of poly(ADP-ribose), the end-product of PARP activity has been demonstrated after brain ischemia in man. Several therapeutic strategies have been used to try to prevent oxidative damage and its consequences after brain ischemia in man. Although some of the drugs used in early studies were ineffective or had unacceptable side effects, other trials with antioxidant drugs have proven highly encouraging. The findings in recent animal studies are likely to lead to a range of further pharmacological strategies to limit brain injury in stroke patients.
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PMID:Oxidative stress in brain ischemia. 998 55


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