Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0017160 (gastroenteritis)
11,398 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Interleukin-8 (IL-8) elaborated by monocytes and endothelial cells is a cytokine which is responsible for adhesion of leucocytes to vascular endothelium and migration of neutrophils into the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) from the intravascular space. The inflammation in meningitis is elicited by the cytokine release from leucocytes which encounter micro-organisms in the arachnoid or subarachnoid space. In bacterial meningitis, tumour necrosis factor (TNF), IL-1 and IL-6 are produced vigorously, and initiate and augment the inflammation in the central nervous system. In this study, utilizing a quantitative immunometric sandwich enzyme immunoassay, the concentration of IL-8 was investigated in the CSF of patients with bacterial meningitis, patients with aseptic meningitis, and patients with gastroenteritis who served as controls. The IL-8 concentration was markedly higher in the CSF of patients with bacterial meningitis (224 +/- 2.57 pg/ml; mean +/- SD) than in the CSF of patients with aseptic meningitis (less than 30 pg/ml). The IL-8 level in the CSF of patients with aseptic meningitis did not differ from that in the CSF of the patients with gastroenteritis (less than 30 pg/ml). The augmented production of IL-8 in CSF may account for the inflammation in bacterial meningitis being more severe than that in aseptic meningitis.
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PMID:Augmented production of interleukin-8 in cerebrospinal fluid in bacterial meningitis. 826 63

The present paper further links nervous-endocrine-immune systems by describing influences of SP on the immune system, and more specifically, on macrophage function. We have discussed how macrophages are important to immune responses in that much of cellular and humoral responses depend on macrophage function. Macrophages are sensitive to stress in that cold-water stress causes increased cytokine production, either spontaneously (IL-1), or after induction with LPS (IL-6, TNF alpha). Increased cytokine levels (IL-1, IL-6) may induce acute phase reactants in the liver, which is presumably the mechanism operative in the studies indicating increases in acute phase reactants after certain stressors in animals. SP is a likely candidate to affect immune function. Previous data show that macrophages from various species have receptors for and respond to SP in vitro. SP stimulates phagocytic and chemotactic capacity, as well as increased cytokine, PGE2, and thromboxane B2 production. SP is also involved in neurogenic inflammation and is likely to be involved in the pathogenesis of several inflammatory diseases. Present data indicate SP's involvement in macrophage responses to stress. We have shown that stress induced differential SP receptor binding to peritoneal macrophages, although the precise nature of binding differences has not yet been clearly elucidated. Stress also induces more immunoreactive SP in the peritoneal fluid that bathes the peritoneal macrophages. We hypothesize that the two events, altered SP binding and concomitant increased ligand, are causally related. In addition to other correlational data showing concomitant increased SP binding plus ligand concentrations, there is more direct evidence that SP ligand may induce SP receptor expression since the SP antagonist, CP-96,345, prevents the induction of SP receptor mRNA in the staphylococcal toxin A-induced gastroenteritis (C. Pothoulakis and S. E. Leeman, personal communication). Further supporting our notion for a causal relationship we have found the elimination of SP in vivo (via capsaicin pretreatment) reduced SP binding, as has been previously reported. We have also examined the role of SP on stress-induced altered macrophage function in vitro. SP greatly enhanced the LPS-induced macrophage TNF alpha production from stressed animals; in contrast, it produced relatively little effect on macrophages from control animals. Capsaicin pretreatment diminished the enhanced cytokine production in response to stress, such that levels of TNF alpha and IL-6 approximated those of control mice. Taken together, past and present data suggest that (1) stress may initiate, or at least contribute to, an inflammatory response, and that (2) SP is involved in the macrophage stress response. SP has long been known to be involved in inflammatory processes; our data further suggest its role in mediating stress-induced cytokine alterations.
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PMID:Substance P and stress-induced changes in macrophages. 859 23

Rotavirus is the most important cause of severe gastroenteritis in children worldwide. We have investigated cytokine responses to rotavirus infection of cultured intestinal epithelial cells. Interleukin 8 (IL-8) is a chemotactic and cell-activating cytokine that is synthesized by epithelial cells and induced in response to bacterial enteric pathogens. Rotavirus inoculation increased IL-8 mRNA levels in cultured intestinal epithelial cells within 2 hr of infection. IL-8 secretion increased 10(2)- to 10(3)-fold by 8 hr postinfection. Secretion of TNF alpha or IL-1 beta, cytokines which themselves increase IL-8 secretion, was not induced by rotavirus, nor was that of TNF alpha, IFN alpha, IFN gamma, or IL-6. Neutralizing antibodies to TNF alpha or IL-1 alpha/beta did not affect the IL-8 response. Secretion of IL-8 was dependent on an intact viral capsid, as single-shell particles were inert. Neutralizing monoclonal antibodies (vp7-specific) that do not block cell attachment did block rotavirus stimulation of IL-8 secretion, indicating that attachment to the cell surface is not a sufficient stimulus to induce IL-8. Genetically inactivated rotavirus was also effective for IL-8 induction, indicating that viral replication was not required. These data suggest that epithelial cytokine IL-8 may be an important mediator of the host response to viral gastroenteritis pathogens such as rotavirus.
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PMID:Rotavirus stimulates IL-8 secretion from cultured epithelial cells. 866 35

The lack of readily available experimental systems has limited knowledge pertaining to the development of Salmonella-induced gastroenteritis and diarrheal disease in humans. We used a novel low-shear stress cell culture system developed at the National Aeronautics and Space Administration in conjunction with cultivation of three-dimensional (3-D) aggregates of human intestinal tissue to study the infectivity of Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium for human intestinal epithelium. Immunohistochemical characterization and microscopic analysis of 3-D aggregates of the human intestinal epithelial cell line Int-407 revealed that the 3-D cells more accurately modeled human in vivo differentiated tissues than did conventional monolayer cultures of the same cells. Results from infectivity studies showed that Salmonella established infection of the 3-D cells in a much different manner than that observed for monolayers. Following the same time course of infection with Salmonella, 3-D Int-407 cells displayed minimal loss of structural integrity compared to that of Int-407 monolayers. Furthermore, Salmonella exhibited significantly lower abilities to adhere to, invade, and induce apoptosis of 3-D Int-407 cells than it did for infected Int-407 monolayers. Analysis of cytokine expression profiles of 3-D Int-407 cells and monolayers following infection with Salmonella revealed significant differences in expression of interleukin 1alpha (IL-1alpha), IL-1beta, IL-6, IL-1Ra, and tumor necrosis factor alpha mRNAs between the two cultures. In addition, uninfected 3-D Int-407 cells constitutively expressed higher levels of transforming growth factor beta1 mRNA and prostaglandin E2 than did uninfected Int-407 monolayers. By more accurately modeling many aspects of human in vivo tissues, the 3-D intestinal cell model generated in this study offers a novel approach for studying microbial infectivity from the perspective of the host-pathogen interaction.
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PMID:Three-dimensional tissue assemblies: novel models for the study of Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium pathogenesis. 1159 87

The involvement of the proinflammatory cytokines, interleukin 8 (IL-8) and 6 (IL-6), was studied during the first 72 h of acute invasive gastroenteritis. Study population included 33 infants and young children aged six months to six years and seven age-matched controls. As a group, patients with acute invasive gastroenteritis had an increased serum level of IL-8 and IL-6 as compared with healthy controls (p < 0.002 and p < 0.001, respectively). Subjects were then divided into two groups based on stool cultures (proven and non-proven bacterial cultures). Patients with bacterial-proven acute invasive gastroenteritis tended to have increased IL-8 serum concentrations (p < 0.07) as compared with those with non-proven bacterial etiologies and IL-6 levels were only detected in subjects with positive bacterial cultures (p < 0.05). When dividing each sub-group into early and late blood drawing with respect to disease onset, no statistical differences were found in each group but subjects with bacterial-proven etiologies had significant higher IL-6 levels as compared with non-proven etiologies at the two time points (p < 0.019 and p < 0.015, respectively). In conclusion, the proinflammatory cytokines, IL-6 and IL-8, are involved in acute invasive gastroenteritis. The difference in IL-6, and to a lesser degree IL-8, between proven and non-proven bacterial etiologies, needs further investigation.
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PMID:The involvement of IL-6 and IL-8 in acute invasive gastroenteritis of children. 1289 Apr 52

Rotavirus is the most common cause of severe gastroenteritis in young children, but the pathogenesis and immunity of this disease are not completely understood. To examine the host response to acute infection, we collected paired serum specimens from 30 children with rotavirus diarrhea and measured the levels of nine cytokines (interleukin-1beta [IL-1beta], IL-2, IL-4, IL-6, IL-8, IL-10, IL-12, gamma interferon [IFN-gamma], and tumor necrosis factor alpha [TNF-alpha]) using a microsphere-based Luminex Flowmetrix system. Patients with acute rotavirus infection had elevated median levels of seven cytokines in serum, and of these, the levels of three (IL-6, IL-10, and IFN-gamma) were significantly (P < 0.05) higher than those in serum from control children without diarrhea. Patients with fever had significantly (P < 0.05) higher levels of IL-6 in serum than control children, and those with fever and more episodes of diarrhea had significantly (P < 0.05) higher levels of TNF-alpha than those without fever and with fewer episodes of diarrhea. We further demonstrated a negative association (P < 0.05) between the levels of IL-2 and the number of stools on the day on which the first blood sample was collected. Finally, patients with vomiting had significantly (P < 0.05) lower levels of IFN-gamma than those without vomiting. Our pilot study provides evidence that the types and magnitudes of cytokine responses to rotavirus infection in children influence or reflect the clinical outcome of disease. These findings suggest that certain cytokines may play an important role in the pathogenesis of and the protection against rotavirus disease in children and, consequently, may provide directions and insights that could prove critical to the prevention or treatment of this important disease.
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PMID:Cytokines as mediators for or effectors against rotavirus disease in children. 1460 58

Nitric oxide (NO) is a highly reactive free radical that is involved in a variety of different biological process. In recent reports, the putative role of NO in the neuropathogenesis of brain inflammation has been demonstrated. And then the relation between neuronal NO and convulsive seizures induced by virus has been suggested. However, there are few reports about NO in vivo under viral neurological infections. In order to evaluate the relation between NO production and neurological disorders induced by viral infection, sixty-six cases including 11 patients with rotavirus gastroenteritis admitted for convulsions were examined in this study. NO metabolites (NOx) levels in both serum and cerebrospinal fluid obtained from rotavirus gastroenteritis patients with convulsion were much higher than in those of patients with purulent meningitis, encephalitis, febrile convulsion or in the control group. There was a relative correlation between IL-6 and NOx in some cases. These results indicated that NO may have a pathophysiological role in convulsions associated by rotavirus infection either through indirect or direct effects of NO. Consequently, NOx inhibitors might be helpful for the treatment of rotavirus encephalopathy.
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PMID:Serum and cerebrospinal fluid nitrite/nitrate levels in patients with rotavirus gastroenteritis induced convulsion. 1470 70

Listeria monocytogenes induces the suppurative gastritis in some mice strains. In this study, characteristics of the gastritis caused by L. monocytogenes infection in mice were examined with time course of infection. Mice were administered intragastrically with 1.8 x 10(8) CFU of L. monocytogenes. Each three mice were sacrificed by cervical dislocation at 1, 3, 5, 7, 10, 14, 17, 21, and 28 days postinoculation (pi), respectively. Bacterial colonization in the stomachs reached the peak at 3 days pi, maintained over 4.3 log10 CFU/g tissue until 14 days pi, and was cleared by 28 days pi. However, in the spleens and livers, the bacteria could not be detected after 7 days pi. The gastric lesions were the most prominent at between 3 and 7 days pi. The lesions consisted of marked neutrophilic infiltration, edema, vacuolar degeneration and necrosis of muscle cells and were more severe in the nonglandular region and fundus than in the pylorus, and were in submucosa, lamina muscularis, and serosa than in mucosa. mRNA expression of several cytokines (INF-gamma, IL-1beta, IL-5, IL-6, IL-12, and TNF-alpha) and chemokines (KC, MCP-1) increased in the gastric tissue of infected mice at 1-7 days pi and slightly decreased at 14 days pi. These findings would be useful for studying the pathological mechanism of human febrile gastroenteritis due to L. monocytogenes infection.
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PMID:Characteristics of the gastritis induced by Listeria monocytogenes in mice: microbiology, histopathology, and mRNA expression of inflammatory mediators with time course of infection. 1531 48

Knowledge about the origin and identity of the microbial products recognized by the innate immune system is important for understanding the pathogenesis of inflammatory diseases. We investigated the potential role of Salmonella enterica serotype Typhimurium fimbriae as pathogen-associated molecular patterns (PAMPs) that may stimulate innate pathways of inflammation. We screened a panel of 11 mutants, each carrying a deletion of a different fimbrial operon, for their enteropathogenicity using the calf model of human gastroenteritis. One mutant (csgBA) was attenuated in its ability to elicit fluid accumulation and GROalpha mRNA expression in bovine ligated ileal loops. The mechanism by which thin curled fimbriae encoded by the csg genes contribute to inflammation was further investigated using tissue culture. The S. Typhimurium csgBA mutant induced significantly less IL-8 production than the wild type in human macrophage-like cells. Purified thin curled fimbriae induced IL-8 expression in human embryonic kidney (HEK293) cells transfected with Toll-like receptor (TLR) 2/CD14 but not in cells transfected with TLR5, TLR4/MD2/CD14 or TLR11. Fusion proteins between the major fimbrial subunit of thin curled fimbriae (CsgA) and glutathione-S-transferase (GST) elicited IL-8 production in HEK293 cells transfected with TLR2/CD14. Proteinase K treatment abrogated IL-8 production elicited in these cells by GST-CsgA, but not by synthetic lipoprotein. GST-CsgA elicited more IL-6 production than GST in bone marrow-derived macrophages from TLR2+/+ mice, while there was no difference in IL-6 secretion between GST-CsgA and GST in macrophages from TLR2-/- mice. These data suggested that CsgA is a PAMP that is recognized by TLR2.
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PMID:CsgA is a pathogen-associated molecular pattern of Salmonella enterica serotype Typhimurium that is recognized by Toll-like receptor 2. 1616 66

We studied the interaction of RV with human peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) from adult volunteers. After exposure of PBMC to rhesus RV (RRV), T and B lymphocytes, NK cells, monocytes, and myeloid and plasmacytoid dendritic cells expressed RV non-structural proteins, at variable levels. Expression of these RV proteins was abolished if infection was done in the presence of anti-VP7 neutralizing antibodies or 10% autologous serum. Supernatants of RRV exposed PBMC contained TNF-alpha, IL-6, IFN-alpha, IFN-gamma, IL-2 and IL-10. Plasmacytoid DC were found to be the main source of IFN-alpha production, and in their absence the production of IFN-gamma and the frequency of RV specific T cells that secrete IFN-gamma diminished. Finally, we could not detect RV-antigen associated with the PBMC or expression of RV non-structural proteins in PBMC of acutely RV-infected children. Thus, although PBMC are susceptible to the initial steps of RV infection, most PBMC of children with RV-gastroenteritis are not infected.
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PMID:Interaction of rotavirus with human peripheral blood mononuclear cells: plasmacytoid dendritic cells play a role in stimulating memory rotavirus specific T cells in vitro. 1749 31


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