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Query: EC:2.6.1.1 (
aspartate aminotransferase
)
21,665
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Tissue injury is a common occurrence in multiple organ failure, a possible clinical complication of Gram-negative bacterial sepsis. Gram-negative bacteria, in part through lipopolysaccharide (LPS), tumor necrosis factor, and other cytokines, activate neutrophils to increase oxygen consumption and produce reactive oxygen species (ROS). ROS have been suggested to play a critical role in the pathogenesis of multiple organ failure. Accordingly, we hypothesized that the susceptibility of tissues to ROS can be reduced by augmenting the antioxidant status of the affected tissues. Rats were challenged intravenously with LPS (Escherichia coli: 0111:B4) at a dose of 1 mg/kg body weight, and 0, 2, 4, or 6 h later were treated intravenously with plain liposomes or alpha-tocopherol liposomes (20 mg alpha-tocopherol/kg body weight); treated rats were then killed 24 h after LPS challenge. Animals challenged with LPS were extensively damaged in the liver, as evidenced by an increase in plasma alanine aminotransferase and
aspartate aminotransferase
activities, and also in the lung, as indicated by a decrease in pulmonary angiotensin-converting enzyme and alkaline phosphatase activities. The injection of LPS also resulted in increased
myeloperoxidase
activities in the two organs, suggestive of activation of the inflammatory response. Within the pulmonary and hepatic organs of LPS-challenged animals, the involvement of oxidative stress mechanisms was evident, because a significant decrease in reduced glutathione and an increase in lipid peroxidation were observed. In contrast, the administration of alpha-tocopherol liposomes in the post-LPS-challenge period resulted in a significant alleviation of both lung and liver injuries, evidenced by a general reversal of the altered biochemical indices toward normal among treated animals. The therapeutic effect was found to be greater when liposomal alpha-tocopherol treatment was given earlier during the development of injury. Plain liposomes administered immediately after LPS injection also protected hepatic and pulmonary tissues from injuries. However, unlike alpha-tocopherol liposomes, plain liposomes did not confer any beneficial effect when administered at later timepoints post-LPS injection. These data suggest that alpha-tocopherol, administered in a liposomal form, may serve as a potentially effective pharmacological agent in the treatment of LPS-induced tissue injuries.
...
PMID:Treatment of LPS-induced tissue injury: role of liposomal antioxidants. 882 99
Up-regulation of the leukocyte beta 2 integrin, CD18, is a key event in neutrophil-endothelial adhesion and neutrophil-mediated organ injury. Inhibition of CD18 with monoclonal antibodies reduces lung and liver neutrophil sequestration in animal models of Gram-negative bacteremia or endotoxemia. However, with a persistent septic challenge, interference with host leukocyte phagocytic defense could adversely affect outcome. To assess the effects of inhibiting CD18 on organ neutrophil responses, bacteremia, and organ injury after fecal peritonitis, mice underwent cecal ligation and puncture (CLP). At the time of CLP and 12 h later, mice received intravenous anti-CD18 antibody or control IgG. At 3, 6, and 18 h after CLP, lung and liver tissue neutrophil content were measured by
myeloperoxidase
(
MPO
) assay, peritoneal cells and blood leukocytes were differentially counted, blood was cultured, and serum
aspartate aminotransferase
was measured. There was a significant reduction in peritoneal neutrophil migration and an increase in blood neutrophils after anti-CD18 treatment compared with results from treatment with the control antibody. In the anti-CD18-treated group, liver
MPO
was increased fivefold at 6 and 18 h, while lung
MPO
was increased two-fold at 18 h when compared with the control antibody-treated group. The anti-CD18-treated group also had an increase in bacteria cultured from the blood at 6 and 18 h and an increase in serum aminotransferase at 18 h. Our data demonstrate that peritoneal neutrophil migration in response to an endogenous fecal challenge is CD18-dependent, and that this mechanism forms a vital part of host defense. Inhibition of CD18 increased neutrophil sequestration in the liver and lung and increased liver injury. This study demonstrates a paradoxical increase in organ neutrophil sequestration using a leukocyte anti-adhesion therapy during sepsis and suggests that anti-adhesion therapies targeted towards neutrophil may worsen outcome if given during an ongoing, localized infection.
...
PMID:Inhibition of neutrophil migration at the site of infection increases remote organ neutrophil sequestration and injury. 937 66
The aim of this study was to determine whether the administration of free radical antagonists, immediately before and during the early minutes of reperfusion, improves muscle survival 24 hr after a period of ischemia. Rabbit rectus femoris muscles were isolated, made ischemic for 3 1/2 hr and treated with either desferrioxamine (DFX), an Fe3+ chelator, superoxide dismutase and catalase (SOD & CAT), which quench superoxide and hydrogen peroxide, or allopurinol, an inhibitor of xanthine oxidase (XO). After 24 hr reperfusion, muscle viability (+/-s.e.m.), measured by the nitro blue tetrazolium (NBT) vital staining technique, was 41.6 +/- 11.3% for saline-treated ischemic controls, 30.6 +/- 7.6% for DFX-treated, 46.7 +/- 10.3% for SOD & CAT-treated, and 43.3 +/- 9.5% for allopurinol-treated muscles. None of the treated groups differed significantly from the ischemic control group. Tissue
myeloperoxidase
, ATP and reduced glutathione levels, and plasma lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) and
aspartate transaminase
(
AST
) levels were increased by ischemia and reperfusion in all groups, but the changes did not differ between the treatment groups. Levels of XO in the rabbit muscle were determined and found to be very low in both normal and postischemic muscle. As XO is the target enzyme of allopurinol, its absence provides a basis for the lack of effect of this agent. However, it is not clear why DFX and SOD & CAT had no protective effect.
...
PMID:Influence of postischemic administration of oxyradical antagonists on ischemic injury to rabbit skeletal muscle. 939 70
Prevention of cellular damage after warm ischemia is of major importance in liver transplantation. In this study, we determined the extent to which lipid peroxides contribute to the pathogenesis of hepatic cell damage induced by transient warm ischemia with subsequent reperfusion. In addition, the function and immunohistochemical features of glutathione peroxidase, a potent physiological lipid peroxide scavenger of the liver, was assessed. Reperfusion following 15 or 30 minutes of warm ischemia resulted in a significant elevation in serum and liver lipid
peroxidase
(LPO) levels. In addition, necrosis of the hepatic periportal area accompanied with remarkable rises in serum
aspartate aminotransferase
(
AST
) and alanine aminotransferase (ALT) were observed. In contrast, 30 min of ischemia without reperfusion caused minimal hepatocellular damage. The adverse changes after ischemia/reperfusion were minimized by pretreatment with superoxide dismutase (SOD). These results indicate that increased lipid peroxidation by production of radicals after reperfusion caused the liver cell damage. After ischemia/reperfusion, liver glutathione peroxidase (GSH-PO) activity was significantly decreased and its location altered in the damaged liver. These findings suggest that GSH-PO contributes significantly to the protection against hepatic reperfusion injuries.
...
PMID:Alterations in glutathione peroxidase activity following reperfusion injury to rat liver. 960 29
A continuous spectrophotometric assay for determining low levels of L-glutamate is described. The assay, which involves the enzymes L-glutamate oxidase and glutamic-pyruvic transaminase, is based on the recycling of L-glutamate into alpha-ketoglutarate, with the concomitant appearance of one molecule of hydrogen peroxide in each turn of the cycle. This is subsequently reduced by means of a
peroxidase
-coupled reaction, using 2, 2'-azinobis(3-ethylbenzthiazoline-6-sulfonic acid) as substrate. In this way the interference observed in the cyclic assay using
glutamic-oxalacetic transaminase
, which is due to the fact that L-aspartate is also a substrate of L-glutamate oxidase, is eliminated. A kinetic study of the system is presented, with the accumulation of chromophore being seen to undergo a transient phase, which is dependent both on the cycling rate and on the auxiliary enzyme concentration. The kinetic parameters characterizing the system have been determined, making it possible to optimize costs with respect to the enzymes involved in the cycle, since the minimum amount needed for a given rate constant of the cycle can be calculated.
...
PMID:A continuous spectrophotometric method based on enzymatic cycling for determining L-glutamate. 961 6
We investigated the protective effect of urinary trypsin inhibitor (ulinastatin: UTI) in vitro, in relation to the neutrophil activity in hepatic ischemia/reperfusion (I/R) injury. The rat liver was removed and preserved in cold Ringer's lactate solution for 60 min, followed by 120 min of reperfusion with oxygenated perfusate. The rats were divided into four groups (n = 8 in each group). The livers were perfused with Krebs-Henseleit (K-H) solution containing no additives in group 1, 50,000 U/kg of UTI in group 2, 3.5 x 10(6) of neutrophils in group 3, and both neutrophils and UTI in group 4. In group 3, the
AST
and ALT levels were always higher than those in other three groups at any point evaluated (P < 0.01) and the LDH levels were observed to be significantly higher than those in other three groups at 0, 5, 10, 60, and 90 min after reperfusion (P < 0. 01). These increase were suppressed by additional pretreatment with UTI in group 4. The bile flow during reperfusion was significantly suppressed in group 3 compared to that of group 4, at both 30 (P < 0. 01) and 60 (P < 0.05) min after reperfusion. The
MPO
activity after reperfusion in group 3 also significantly increased compared to other three groups (P < 0.01). These data thus suggest that UTI ameliorated the ischemia/reperfusion injury in vitro by inhibiting of neutrophil accumulation in the postischemic liver.
...
PMID:Protective effects of ulinastatin against ischemia-reperfusion injury. 1006 23
Recombinant human alpha 1-antitrypsin (rAAT) was expressed and secreted from transgenic rice cell suspension cultures in its biologically active form. This was accomplished by transforming rice callus tissues with an expression vector, p3D-
AAT
, containing the cDNA for mature human
AAT
protein. Regulated expression and secretion of rAAT from this vector was achieved using the promoter, signal peptide, and terminator from a rice alpha-amylase gene Amy3D. The Amy3D gene of rice is tightly controlled by simple sugars such as sucrose. It was possible, therefore, to induce the expression of the rAAT by removing sucrose from the cultured media or by allowing the rice suspension cells to deplete sucrose catabolically. Although transgenic rice cell produced a heterogeneous population of the rAAT molecules, they had the same N-terminal amino acids as those found in serum-derived (native)
AAT
from humans. This result indicates that the rice signal peptidase recognizes and cleaves the novel sequence between the Amy3D signal peptide and the first amino acid of the mature human
AAT
. The highest molecular weight band seen on Western blots (
AAT
top band) was found to have the correct C-terminal amino acid sequence and normal elastase binding activity. Staining with biotin-concanavalin A and avidin horseradish
peroxidase
confirmed the glycosylation of the rAAT, albeit to a lesser extent than that observed with native
AAT
. The rAAT, purified by immunoaffinity chromatography, had the same association rate constant for porcine pancreatic elastase as the native
AAT
. Thermostability studies revealed that the rAAT and native
AAT
decayed at the same rate, suggesting that the rAAT is correctly folded. The productivity of rice suspension cells expressing rAAT was 4.6-5.7 mg/g dry cell. Taken together, these results support the use of rice cell culture as a promising new expression system for production of biologically active recombinant proteins.
...
PMID:Production of functional human alpha 1-antitrypsin by plant cell culture. 1057 Jul 99
Patients with homozygous (PiZ) alpha(1)-antitrypsin (
AAT
) deficiency have not only low baseline serum
AAT
levels (approximately 10 to 15% normal) but also an attenuated acute phase response. They are susceptible to the development of premature emphysema but may also be particularly susceptible to lung damage during bacterial exacerbations when there will be a significant neutrophil influx. The purposes of the present study were to assess the inflammatory nature of acute bacterial exacerbations of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) in subjects with AAT deficiency, to compare this with COPD patients without deficiency, and to monitor the inflammatory process and its resolution following appropriate antibacterial therapy. At the start of the exacerbation, patients with AAT deficiency had lower sputum
AAT
(p < 0.001) and secretory leukoprotease inhibitor (SLPI; p = 0.02) with higher elastase activity (p = 0.02) compared with COPD patients without deficiency. Both groups had a comparable acute phase response as assessed by C-reactive protein (CRP) but the
AAT
-deficient patients had a minimal rise in serum
AAT
(to < 6 microM). After treatment with antibiotics, in patients with AAT deficiency, there were significant changes in many sputum proteins including a rise in SLPI levels, and a reduction in
myeloperoxidase
(
MPO
) and elastase activity (p < 0. 005 for all measures); the sputum chemoattractants interleukin-8 (IL-8) and leukotriene B(4) (LTB(4)) fell (p < 0.01), and protein leak (sputum/serum albumin ratio) became lower (p < 0.01). The changes were rapid and within 3 d of the commencement of antibiotic therapy the biochemical markers had decreased significantly, but took a variable time thereafter to return to baseline values. In conclusion, patients with AAT deficiency had evidence of increased elastase activity at the start of the exacerbation when compared with nondeficient COPD patients which probably reflects a deficient antiproteinase screen (lower sputum
AAT
and SLPI). The increased bronchial inflammation at presentation resolved rapidly with 14 d of antibiotic therapy.
...
PMID:Evidence for excessive bronchial inflammation during an acute exacerbation of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease in patients with alpha(1)-antitrypsin deficiency (PiZ). 1058 15
The course of Trypanosoma congolense infections in African grey duiker (Sylvicapra grimmia) and sheep and goats were studied. Several parameters suggested that the grey duiker was much more resistant to trypanosomosis than sheep and goats. They showed increases in weight during infection, had a much longer pre-patent period, and their peak parasitaemia levels were about 100-fold lower than those of sheep and goats. Parasites were no longer detected in grey duiker blood 35 days after infection. Anaemia, measured as drops in packed cell volume (PCV), haemoglobin (Hb) concentration and erythrocyte (RBC) counts were not observed in the grey duiker. In contrast, sheep and goats suffered severe weight losses and had continuously high parasitaemia levels. Sheep and goats developed progressively severe normocytic normochromic anaemia and leucopenia from day 14 post-infection onwards. Serum levels of total protein, globulin and albumin of grey duiker did not change significantly throughout the course of infection, while the levels of total serum protein, globulin and gamma-globulin exhibited significant increases from day 21 post-infection onwards in sheep and goats, with peak values recorded on 28 and 35 days post-infection in sheep and goats, respectively. There were inconsistent variations in albumin levels in sheep and goats throughout the course of infection. There were no significant changes in erythrocyte activities of
AST
and ALT, while there were transient but significant elevations of ALP level on day 35, and GGT levels between 14 and 35 days post-infection in grey duiker. Conversely, the levels of all the enzymes were progressively depressed, especially from 14 to 49 days post-infection. In vitro erythrocyte peroxidation remained relatively unchanged throughout the period of the experiment in the grey duiker, except for slight but significant increase on day 42 post-infection. However, in vitro erythrocyte peroxidation increased significantly by between 100 and 300% of pre-infection levels from 14th to 42nd day p.i. both in sheep and goats, before returning to pre-infection levels after 14 days of treatment. Haematological values, serum and erythrocyte indices studied returned to near pre-infection levels 14 days after treatment with Berenil((R)). It is concluded that the grey duiker is inherently trypanotolerant. This is shown by its ability to control parasitaemia, suffer less severe anaemia, and to a relative degree resist pathobiochemical derangements of some serum and erythrocyte metabolites and enzymes, as well as reduction of infection-induced erythrocyte lipid
peroxidase
damage than sheep and goats.
...
PMID:Pathobiochemical mechanisms involved in the control of the disease caused by Trypanosoma congolense in African grey duiker (Sylvicapra grimmia). 1118 35
There has been a widespread impression that tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) and interleukin-1beta (IL-1beta) mediate the toxicity of high doses of lipopolysaccharide (LPS, endotoxin) and are key factors in septic shock. However, the clinical efficacy of treatment with antagonists of TNF-alpha and IL-1beta is still controversial, suggesting that mediators other than TNF-alpha and IL-1beta might contribute causally to endotoxin-induced death. Recent studies implicated high mobility group-1 (HMG-1) protein as a late mediator of endotoxin lethality in mice. However, the role of HMG-1 in mediating multiple organ damage-associating trauma has not been studied. This study was designed to investigate changes in HMG-1 gene expression in vital organs, and its potential role in mediating multiple organ damage following major burns. Wistar rats were subjected to a 35 percent full-thickness thermal injury, and randomly divided into three groups as follows: normal controls (n = 7), thermal injury (n = 24), and recombinant bactericidal/permeability-increasing protein (rBPI21) treatment (n = 12). Tissue samples from liver and lungs were collected to measure tissue endotoxin levels and HMG-1 mRNA expression. In addition, blood samples were obtained for measurement of organ function parameters. Our data demonstrated a significant increase in HMG-1 gene expression in tissues at 24 h postburn, which remained markedly elevated up to 72 h after thermal injury (P< 0.05-0.01). Treatment with rBPI21 could significantly decrease tissue HMG-1 mRNA expression in the liver and lung (P < 0.01). In addition, there were high positive correlations between hepatic HMG-1 mRNA and serum aminoleucine transferase (ALT) and
aspartate aminotransferase
(
AST
) levels, and also between pulmonary HMG-1 mRNA and
myeloperoxidase
activities (P < 0.05-0.01). Taken together, these findings indicate that thermal injury per se can markedly enhance HMG-1 gene expression in various organs. Up-regulation of HMG-1 expression may be involved in the pathogenesis of endogenous endotoxin-mediated multiple organ damage secondary to major burns.
...
PMID:The significance of changes in high mobility group-1 protein mRNA expression in rats after thermal injury. 1195 36
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