Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (depression)
172,036 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Treatment of mice with endotoxin (lipopolysaccharide, LPS) and the two LPS-induced monokines, tumor necrosis factor (TNF) and interleukin-1 (IL-1), caused a depression of liver cytochrome P-450 and related drug-metabolizing enzymes, as well as other acute-phase changes including increase in plasma fibrinogen levels and hypoferremia. However, only IL-1, not TNF or LPS, depressed cytochrome P-450 in cultured hepatocytes, suggesting that the effect of TNF in vivo might be mediated by a second mediator. TNF- or LPS-stimulated monocytes released a factor capable of depressing cytochrome P-450 in cultured hepatocytes. This factor was inhibited by anti-IL-1 antiserum, and its synthesis, like that of IL-1, was inhibited by dexamethasone (DEX). Pretreatment of mice with DEX protected against the depression of liver cytochrome P-450 by LPS or TNF but not by IL-1, suggesting that IL-1 directly depresses cytochrome P-450 and that DEX acts by inhibiting IL-1 synthesis in vivo induced by LPS or TNF. However, DEX did not inhibit two other effects of LPS and TNF in vivo: increase of plasma fibrinogen levels and decrease of plasma iron, suggesting that these might not be mediated by IL-1. Therefore, the effect of DEX in vivo, although supporting the hypothesis that depression of liver cytochrome P-450 by LPS and TNF is mediated by IL-1, indicates the existence of IL-1-independent pathways in the acute-phase response.
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PMID:Dexamethasone modulation of in vivo effects of endotoxin, tumor necrosis factor, and interleukin-1 on liver cytochrome P-450, plasma fibrinogen, and serum iron. 278 6

Cell-free culture supernatants of a lipopolysaccharide (LPS) O-polysaccharide-deficient, single-insertion transposon mutant of the tetragonal surface protein array (S layer)-containing fish pathogen Aeromonas salmonicida were examined by electron microscopy. Negative staining showed that the S layer was released as sheets of tetragonal material, indicating that although surface retention of assembled S layer requires the presence of wild-type LPS oligosaccharides, initial assembly of S-layer subunits into sheets does not require the presence of O-polysaccharide chains. The three-dimensional structure of the S layer was reconstructed from tilted micrographs of the released sheets. Horizontal sections through this reconstruction showed that the released sheets were composed of two identical S layers that were perfectly in register. The reconstructed layer had a lattice constant of 12.5 nm. At a resolution of 1.6 nm, the layer consisted of a major tetragon at one fourfold axis of symmetry and a minor tetragon at the second fourfold axis of symmetry. The core, composed of four of the major domains, contained a large depression and was located toward the inside of the layer. The minor tetragon provided connectivity within the layer and was located toward the outer surface of the layer. Projections through the double layer gave a type I (closed) pattern (M. Stewart, T. J. Beveridge, and T. J. Trust, J. Bacteriol. 166:120-127, 1986), yet projections through the single layer indicated that the type II (open) pattern was present. This open pattern was indistinguishable from that seen in S layer released from the surfaces of wild-type cells.
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PMID:Three-dimensional structure of an open form of the surface layer from the fish pathogen Aeromonas salmonicida. 291 46

The afferent arc of the in vivo cytotoxic T-cell immunity assessed by second set rejection of ascitic allogeneic tumors was shown to be depressed by bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS) that was administered simultaneously with or 1 day before injection of allogeneic spleen cells as stimulators. Two different LPSs from Escherichia coli O55 and Klebsiella O3 displayed similar activities whereas dextran sulfate, concanavalin A, or poly A:U was not effective. Stimulator activities of allogeneic cells was not directly modified by LPS. Any definite suppressor activity on afferent or efferent arc of the T-cell response was not demonstrable in mice receiving LPS and allogeneic cells. Further, the LPS effect for immune depression was not diminished by whole body X-ray irradiation to the recipient at 300 R, which ablated the B-cell reactivity to LPS for polyclonal activation, or by treatment of the recipient with carrageenan, a known toxic agent to macrophages. It was suggested from these results that LPS suppresses the cytotoxic T-cell immunity by modulating responder T cells to be temporarily refractory to the allogeneic stimulus rather than by activating suppressor cells such as radiation-sensitive lymphocytes and carrageenan-sensitive macrophages.
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PMID:Depression of afferent arc of the in vivo cytotoxic T-cell immunity by bacterial lipopolysaccharides. 293 Nov 81

Mice (C57BL) infected with the intestinal nematode Nematospiroides dubius showed depressed delayed type hypersensitivity responses to ovalbumin administered subcutaneously in Freund's complete adjuvant. IgG and IgM responses to this inoculum were unaffected. It is unlikely that the depression arose from impairment of the ear test response because responses to an extract of the adult parasite were measurable and ear testing with lipopolysaccharide yielded normal responses in infected mice. Furthermore, mice immunized on the day of infection responded normally, whilst long term infected mice ear challenged with antigen pulsed macrophages gave depressed responses. The in vitro proliferative responses of cells from the spleens and from the lymph nodes draining the site of immunization were enhanced marginally by N. dubius infection. Furthermore, these cells induced normal or elevated adoptive delayed-type hypersensitivity and IgG responses in irradiated recipients. These findings suggest that N. dubius does not compromise the development of ovalbumin specific T cells involved in a delayed type hypersensitivity response. Evidence for the induction of suppressor cells by N. dubius is discussed, and the findings are compared with results obtained with Nippostrongylus brasiliensis, a parasite which is rejected rapidly from the mouse.
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PMID:Nematospiroides dubius and Nippostrongylus brasiliensis: delayed type hypersensitivity responses to ovalbumin in the infected mouse. 294 33

Treatment of BALB/c, C57Bl/6 or C3H/HeJ mice with non-toxic concentrations of indomethacin (75-100 micrograms/day) led to a depression of plasma neutral proteinase activity as determined with an (125I)-caseinolytic assay. Lower concentrations of indomethacin (50 micrograms/day), aspirin (1 mg/day), LiCl (3 meq/kg/day), Sulindac (100 micrograms/day), indomethacin analogs (MK-410, MK-555) or lipopolysaccharide (100 micrograms) did not induce depression in proteinase activity. Indomethacin did not directly inhibit the proteinase activity of normal plasma in vitro. The in vivo effects of indomethacin were reversible and plasma proteinase activity returned to normal values within 8 days of cessation of treatment. These results indicate that indomethacin can uniquely alter plasma proteinase homeostasis in normal mice. While effective in depressing the plasma proteinase activity of normal mice, treatment of mice bearing either the BCL1 leukemia or the B16-F10 melanoma with indomethacin did not depress the elevated plasma proteinase levels detected in tumor-bearing animals. Thus the elevation in proteinases detected in tumor-bearing animals may not be the result of increased prostaglandin synthesis and plasma proteinase activity in such disease states may be regulated differently than in normal mice. However, the ability of this potent anti-inflammatory agent to alter proteinase metabolism may contribute to its therapeutic efficacy in the management of inflammatory disease.
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PMID:Indomethacin induces the suppression of plasma neutral proteinase activity in mice: possible relationship to efficacy as an anti-inflammatory drug and induction of alterations in the immune system. 302 Feb 55

We tested the hypothesis that thyrotropin releasing hormone (TRH) would improve cardiovascular function and survival in circulatory shock by opposing the adverse effects of endogenous opioids and other pathophysiologic mediators. Cynomolgus monkeys and mongrel dogs were anesthetized and catheterized to measure mean arterial pressure (MAP) and left ventricular contractility (LV dp/dtmax). Hemorrhagic shock was induced by bleeding into a reservoir to achieve and maintain MAP at 45 mm Hg for one hour. Endotoxic shock was produced by the iv injection of an LD80 dose of Escherichia coli lipopolysaccharide endotoxin (3 mg/kg in dogs and 5 mg/kg in monkeys). Animals were treated iv with either TRH (2 mg/kg plus 2 mg/kg X h) or equivolume saline. TRH significantly increased MAP and LV dp/dtmax in primate hemorrhagic and endotoxic shock. In primate hemorrhagic shock, TRH significantly (p = .02) improved survival (alive/total = 4/5 vs. 0/5). However, TRH had no effect on survival in endotoxemic primates. In contrast, TRH treatment in dogs produced only a transient hemodynamic response after endotoxemia and no significant hemodynamic effect after acute hemorrhage (even at twice the TRH dose). TRH did not affect survival in either dog model of circulatory shock. Based on extensive evidence with the opiate receptor antagonist naloxone in other studies, endogenous opioids play a role in the cardiovascular depression in primate and canine circulatory shock. From these studies with TRH, we conclude that TRH is relatively ineffective in canine circulatory shock, and physiologic antagonism of the adverse effects of opioids and other cardiodepressant substances by TRH administration may prove to be a useful alternative treatment of primate hemorrhagic shock.
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PMID:Thyrotropin releasing hormone: effects in monkeys and dogs subjected to experimental circulatory shock. 310 62

To determine whether stimulation of macrophages with products related to, or released as a consequence of, infectious processes could play a role in inducing the formation of foam cells, we studied the metabolism of native and acetylated low density lipoprotein (LDL) by human macrophages stimulated with lipopolysaccharide (LPS), muramyl dipeptide (MDP), polyinosinic:polycytidilic acid (Poly I:Poly C) and gamma-interferon. Cholesteryl ester (CE) synthesis by macrophages stimulated with LPS, MDP and Poly I:Poly C was markedly increased when the cells were incubated with native LDL (p less than 0.05). When incubated with acetylated LDL, LPS-stimulated macrophages showed a depression in CE synthesis (p less than 0.05). When incubated with acetyl-LDL, macrophages stimulated with Poly I:Poly C and gamma interferon showed a significant increase (p less than 0.05) in CE synthesis. The increase in CE synthesis by LPS-stimulated macrophages exposed to native LDL and by gamma-interferon-stimulated macrophages exposed to acetylated LDL was paralleled by an increase in cholesterol ester mass. The increase in CE synthesis and accumulation observed in LPS-stimulated macrophages incubated with native LDL seems to be due to an increase in the receptor mediated uptake of LDL. LPS inhibited and gamma-interferon activated the expression of the scavenger pathway in human macrophages. This may explain the changes observed in CE synthesis and accumulation when macrophages activated by the above stimuli were incubated with acetylated LDL. In conclusion, activation of human macrophages by some products released during, or as a consequence of, infectious processes led to an increase in CE synthesis and accumulation that may be relevant to the formation of "foam cells".
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PMID:Low density lipoprotein metabolism in human macrophages stimulated with microbial or microbial-related products. 310 36

The effect of lipopolysaccharide preparations from Salmonella enteritidis, Bacteroides gingivalis, and Actinobacillus actinomycetemcomitans on human gingival fibroblasts was studied. Lipopolysaccharide from all sources inhibited fibroblast proliferation in the concentration range of 0.5 to 50 micrograms/ml, with the lipopolysaccharide from A. actinomycetemcomitans having the strongest inhibitory effect. Assessment of the effect of lipopolysaccharide on gingival fibroblast metabolism indicated both total protein and proteoglycan synthesis to be inhibited with increasing concentrations of lipopolysaccharide. As for the antiproliferative effect, lipopolysaccharide from A. actinomycetemcomitans had the greatest inhibitory effect on cell synthetic activity. This inhibitory effect was determined by pulse-chase experiments to be a true depression in synthesis. Furthermore, the effect was independent of lipopolysaccharide-induced changes in cell proliferation and prostaglandin synthesis. This study confirmed the toxic effect of lipopolysaccharide on fibroblasts and, in particular, indicated that various lipopolysaccharide preparations vary in their potency to influence cell proliferation and extracellular matrix synthesis.
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PMID:Effect of lipopolysaccharide on proteoglycan synthesis by adult human gingival fibroblasts in vitro. 316 85

The production of procoagulant activity by circulating monocytes and its regulation by a cytokine secreted by mitogen-stimulated peripheral blood mononuclear cells was investigated in recipients of HLA-identical sibling bone marrow transplants. Blood monocyte numbers reached the normal range within 3 weeks of transplant. After stimulation with lipopolysaccharide, macrophage procoagulant activity was found to be within the normal range in all patients at all times post transplant. It did not appear to correlate with the presence or absence of graft-versus-host disease. Surprisingly, and in marked contrast to our previously documented severe depression of interleukin 2 production by transplant recipients' peripheral blood mononuclear cells, the mitogen-induced production of the cytokine that induces procoagulant activity production (macrophage procoagulant inducing factor, MPIF) was also normal in the majority of patients when assayed using the responsive myelomonocytic cell line RC-2A. These findings suggest firstly that monocyte differentiation and function normalize rapidly post transplant; and secondly, when taken together with previous studies, that the ability of peripheral blood mononuclear cells to synthesize cytokines post transplant varies greatly according to the specific cytokine involved.
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PMID:Cytokine activity after human bone marrow transplantation. II. Production of macrophage procoagulant activity and the cytokine regulating its production, macrophage procoagulant inducing factor. 329 28

The impact of the in-vivo administration of diisopropylfluorophosphate (DFP) on the antibody response in mice was examined. The antigen-specific plaque-forming cell (PFC) response of mice injected with DFP (4 mg/kg) at the time of immunization with a macrophage-dependent T-cell antigen, trinitrophenylated keyhole limpet hemocyanin (TNP-KLH) or sheep red blood cells (SRBC), was significantly depressed. In contrast, the injection of a similar dose of DFP had no effect on the PFC response of mice immunized with a macrophage-independent B-cell antigen, lipopolysaccharide (LPS). This differential effect suggests a possible detrimental effect of DFP on cells involved in antigen processing and/or presentation which are required for the antibody response to SRBC and TNP-KLH. These results, however, do not exclude T cells as a possible target and the cellular targets of DFP action remain to be established. The DFP-mediated depression of the PFC response to SRBC was still evident when DFP was given as early as 1 day before, but not 1 day after, the injection of antigen, suggesting that DFP may well affect an early event of the antibody response. For the secondary TNP-specific IgM PFC response, a significant depression was observed only when DFP was administered at the time of antigen challenge. The injection of DFP at the time of antigen priming, however, was effective in depressing the IgG, but not the IgM, PFC response. Therefore, DFP may also interfere with the generation of antigen-specific memory cells for the secondary IgG response.
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PMID:Effect of diisopropylfluorophosphate on the antibody response. 329 54


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