Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0019158 (hepatitis)
30,205 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

C-X-C chemokines are potent chemoattractants that are believed to mediate neutrophilic inflammation in several organs. Recent studies suggest a role for C-X-C chemokines in the pathogenesis of neutrophilic hepatitis but do not prove causation. We investigated the biological consequences of hepatic chemokine production in vivo by transiently overexpressing cytokine-induced neutrophil chemoattractant (CINC), a member of the C-X-C chemokine family, in intact rats. Rats were injected intraportally with a replication-defective recombinant adenovirus containing the CINC complementary DNA (cDNA). Within 4 days, treated animals had high levels of CINC in both liver tissue and plasma Rats overexpressing CINC exhibited an eightfold increase in circulating neutrophils; they also developed severe hepatic injury, characterized by a 6- to 25-fold increase in plasma transaminases and marked hepatic inflammation on biopsy. Liver disease in CINC-producing rats correlated positively with the number of neutrophils sequestered in the hepatic parenchyma. Tissue injury was attributed directly to chemokine overproduction, because control rats infected with adenoviruses lacking the CINC cDNA did not produce CINC and developed only minor hepatic abnormalities. These experiments provide direct evidence that C-X-C chemokines, when expressed in sufficient quantity in the liver in vivo, induce neutrophil recruitment and tissue invasion and provoke severe liver injury. The data suggest that C-X-C chemokines have important pathogenic potential in both clinical and experimental liver disease.
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PMID:Adenovirus-mediated expression of cytokine-induced neutrophil chemoattractant in rat liver induces a neutrophilic hepatitis. 904 9

Infection of C57BL/6 mice with the V5A13.1 strain of mouse hepatitis virus (MHV-V5A13.1) results in an acute encephalomyelitis and chronic demyelinating disease with features similar to the human demyelinating disease multiple sclerosis. Chemokines are a family of proinflammatory cytokines associated with inflammatory pathology in various diseases. The kinetics and histologic localization of chemokine production in the central nervous system of MHV-infected mice were examined to identify chemokines that contribute to inflammation and demyelination. Transcripts for the chemokines cytokine-response gene-2 (CRG-2), regulated on activation, normal T cell expressed and secreted (RANTES), macrophage-chemoattractant protein-1 and protein-3 (MCP-1, MCP-3), macrophage-inflammatory protein-1beta (MIP-1beta), and MIP-2 were detected in the brains of MHV-infected mice at 3 days postinfection (p.i.), and these transcripts were increased markedly in brains and spinal cords at day 7 p.i., which coincides with the occurrence of acute viral encephalomyelitis. By day 35 p.i., RANTES, CRG-2, and MIP-1beta were detected in brains and spinal cords of mice with chronic demyelination. CRG-2 mRNA expression colocalized with viral RNA and was associated with demyelinating lesions. Astrocytes were the predominant cell type expressing CRG-2 mRNA. These observations suggest a role for chemokines, notably CRG-2, in the initiation and maintenance of an inflammatory response following infection with MHV, which is important in contributing to demyelination.
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PMID:Dynamic regulation of alpha- and beta-chemokine expression in the central nervous system during mouse hepatitis virus-induced demyelinating disease. 955 36

The results of this study to dissect the nature of the acquired immune response to infection with Listeria monocytogenes in mice with targetted gene disruptions show that successful resolution of disease requires the essential presence of alphabeta T cells and the capacity to elaborate gamma interferon. In the absence of either of these entities, mice experience increasingly severe hepatitis and tissue necrosis and die within a few days. The data from this study support the hypothesis that the protective process is the efficient replacement of neutrophils in lesions by longer-lived mononuclear phagocytes; alphabeta-T-cell-knockout mice died from progressive infection before neutrophil replacement could occur, whereas in gammadelta-T-cell-knockout mice this replacement process in the liver has previously been shown to be much slower. In the present study we attribute this delay to reduced production of the macrophage-attracting chemokine MCP-1 in the gammadelta-T-cell-knockout animals. These data further support the hypothesis that gammadelta T cells are important in controlling the inflammatory process rather than being essential to the expression of protection.
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PMID:Disruption of the cellular inflammatory response to Listeria monocytogenes infection in mice with disruptions in targeted genes. 957 19

Secondary lymphoid organ chemokine (SLC) is expressed in high endothelial venules and in T cell zones of spleen and lymph nodes (LNs) and strongly attracts naive T cells. In mice homozygous for the paucity of lymph node T cell (plt) mutation, naive T cells fail to home to LNs or the lymphoid regions of spleen. Here we demonstrate that expression of SLC is undetectable in plt mice. In addition to the defect in T cell homing, we demonstrate that dendritic cells (DCs) fail to accumulate in spleen and LN T cell zones of plt mice. DC migration to LNs after contact sensitization is also substantially reduced. The physiologic significance of these abnormalities in plt mice is indicated by a markedly increased sensitivity to infection with murine hepatitis virus. The plt mutation maps to the SLC locus; however, the sequence of SLC introns and exons in plt mice is normal. These findings suggest that the abnormalities in plt mice are due to a genetic defect in the expression of SLC and that SLC mediates the entry of naive T cells and antigen-stimulated DCs into the T cell zones of secondary lymphoid organs.
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PMID:Mice lacking expression of secondary lymphoid organ chemokine have defects in lymphocyte homing and dendritic cell localization. 992 6

Infection of C57BL/6 mice with mouse hepatitis virus strain V5A13.1 (MHV-V5A13.1) results in an acute encephalitis followed by a chronic, progressive demyelinating disease with clinical and histological similarities to the human demyelinating disease Multiple Sclerosis (MS). Studies were undertaken to evaluate the contribution of NOS2 generated NO in demyelination in MHV-infected mice. MHV-infected animals were treated daily with either 8 mg of aminoguanidine (AG), a selective inhibitor of NOS2 activity, or PBS by intraperitoneal (i.p.) injection. MHV-infection of mice resulted in 20% mortality in both groups with surviving mice clearing virus below levels of detection, as measured by plaque assay, by day 12 postinfection (p.i.). A significant decrease in the severity of clinical disease was observed in AG-treated animals as compared to mice receiving PBS at days 7 and 12 p.i. (P< or =0.001 and 0.003, respectively) however, by day 21 p.i. AG-treated mice exhibited the same severity of clinical disease as control animals. Examination of brain and spinal cords from infected mice revealed a pronounced reduction in the severity of inflammation at day 7 p.i. in mice treated with AG as compared to control mice. By day 12 p.i. there was a significant decrease (P< or =0.02) in the severity of demyelination in AG-treated mice as compared to control animals yet both PBS and AG treated mice had a similar degree of demyelination by day 21 p.i. Analysis of chemokine mRNA transcripts by RNase protection assay revealed that AG-treated mice had significantly lower levels (P < or = 0.007) of transcripts for the C-C chemokine monocyte chemoattractant protein-1 (MCP-1) at day 7 p.i. as compared to control animals. By day 12 p.i., AG-treated mice and control mice had similar levels of chemokine transcripts. Together, these data suggest that inhibition of NOS2/NO slows the progression of MHV-induced demyelination. One potential mechanism by which this may occur is through controlling inflammation through modulation of chemokine expression in the CNS.
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PMID:Inhibition of nitric oxide synthase-2 reduces the severity of mouse hepatitis virus-induced demyelination: implications for NOS2/NO regulation of chemokine expression and inflammation. 1019 Jun 90

Gut-derived lipopolysaccharide (LPS) may contribute to hepatocellular necrosis in alcoholic hepatitis through neutrophil sequestration in hepatic sinusoids. It is well known that the female has a greater susceptibility to alcoholic liver injury than the male. The aim of the present study was to investigate the effect of long-term ethanol consumption on ability of the liver to produce cytokine-induced neutrophil chemoattractant-1 (CINC-1), the most potent neutrophil-chemokine in rats, after LPS administration. Furthermore, we aimed to evaluate the gender difference in this ability. Male and female rats were pair-fed a liquid diet containing 36% of the total calories as ethanol or dextrose for 6 to 8 weeks. They were given LPS intravenously, and chemokine mRNA expression in the liver was evaluated after 2 and 6 hr. To study the organ or chemokine specificity, CINC-1 mRNA expression in the spleen and monocyte chemoattractant protein (MCP)-1 mRNA level were also determined. Serum ALT activity started to increase between 2 and 6 hr. Female rats fed an ethanol diet showed significantly higher ALT activity 6 hr after LPS injection than the male rats. CINC-1 mRNA expressions in the liver after 2 and 6 hr were significantly higher in the ethanol-fed group, compared with the pair-fed control. Female rats fed an ethanol diet showed a significantly higher level of CINC-1 mRNA in the liver than the male rats 2 hr after LPS injection. CINC-1 levels in the liver homogenates paralleled closely its mRNA expression, whereas its concentrations in sera did not correlate with those in the liver. Neither CINC-1 mRNA expression in the spleen nor MCP-1 mRNA expression in the liver was affected by ethanol feeding or gender. An additional experiment using the gonadectomized rats fed an ethanol diet showed that gonadectomy totally abolished the gender difference in CINC-1 mRNA of the liver. We conclude that CINC-1 induction in the liver may be responsible for LPS-induced hepatitis in the ethanol-fed rats, and that the difference in ability to produce CINC-1 between males and females is one important factor that may partly account for the gender difference of alcoholic liver disease.
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PMID:Effect of long-term ethanol consumption on ability to produce cytokine-induced neutrophil chemoattractant-1 in the rat liver and its gender difference. 1023 81

Infection of C57BL/6 mice with mouse hepatitis virus (MHV) results in a demyelinating encephalomyelitis characterized by mononuclear cell infiltration and white matter destruction similar to the pathology of the human demyelinating disease multiple sclerosis. The contributions of CD4(+) and CD8(+) T cells in the pathogenesis of the disease were investigated. Significantly less severe inflammation and demyelination were observed in CD4(-/-) mice than in CD8(-/-) and C57BL/6 mice (P < or = 0.002 and P < or = 0.001, respectively). Immunophenotyping of central nervous system (CNS) infiltrates revealed that CD4(-/-) mice had a significant reduction in numbers of activated macrophages/microglial cells in the brain compared to the numbers in CD8(-/-) and C57BL/6 mice, indicating a role for these cells in myelin destruction. Furthermore, CD4(-/-) mice displayed lower levels of RANTES (a C-C chemokine) mRNA transcripts and protein, suggesting a role for this molecule in the pathogenesis of MHV-induced neurologic disease. Administration of RANTES antisera to MHV-infected C57BL/6 mice resulted in a significant reduction in macrophage infiltration and demyelination (P < or = 0.001) compared to those in control mice. These data indicate that CD4(+) T cells have a pivotal role in accelerating CNS inflammation and demyelination within infected mice, possibly by regulating RANTES expression, which in turn coordinates the trafficking of macrophages into the CNS, leading to myelin destruction.
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PMID:A central role for CD4(+) T cells and RANTES in virus-induced central nervous system inflammation and demyelination. 1062 52

The contribution of the T cell chemoattractant chemokine IFN-inducible protein 10 (IP-10) in host defense following viral infection of the CNS was examined. IP-10 is expressed by astrocytes during acute encephalomyelitis in mouse hepatitis virus-infected mice, and the majority of T lymphocytes infiltrating into the CNS expressed the IP-10 receptor CXCR3. Treatment of mice with anti-IP-10 antisera led to increased mortality and delayed viral clearance from the CNS as compared with control mice. Further, administration of anti-IP-10 led to a >70% reduction (p </= 0.001) in CD4+ and CD8+ T lymphocyte infiltration into the CNS, which correlated with decreased (p </= 0.01) levels of IFN-gamma. These data indicate that IP-10 functions as a sentinel molecule in host defense and is essential in the development of a protective Th1 response against viral infection of the CNS.
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PMID:The T cell chemoattractant IFN-inducible protein 10 is essential in host defense against viral-induced neurologic disease. 1094 53

Hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection causes acute and often also chronic liver disease. Worldwide, prevalence of infection is estimated to exceed that of human immunodeficiency virus infection fourfold. Because of the lack of appropriate animal models, knowledge of interactions between virus and host is still limited. Assumptions regarding pathogenesis or the activation status of innate antiviral host responses, for instance, derive mainly from clinical observations and from expression analyses of selected genes. To obtain a more objective insight into virus-host interrelationships, we used suppression-subtractive hybridization to compare gene expression in HCV-infected and non-HCV-infected liver tissues samples. Four differentially expressed genes were found: (i) the gamma interferon (IFN-gamma)-inducible chemokine IP-10 gene; (ii) the IFN-alpha/beta-inducible antiviral MxA gene; (iii) the gene encoding IFN-alpha/beta-inducible p44, shown to be associated with ultrastructural cytoplasmic entities within hepatocytes of non-A, non-B hepatitis-infected chimpanzees; and (iv) the gene encoding IFN-alpha/beta/gamma-inducible IFI-56K, a protein recently shown to interact with the eukaryotic translation initiation factor eIF-3. Compared to hepatic gene expression in patients with liver diseases unrelated to viral infections, expression in patients with chronic HCV infection was up to 50-fold higher. While in patients with chronic HBV infection IP-10 was slightly activated as well, the IFN-alpha/beta-regulated genes were not. Revealing a dominance of hepatic interferon-regulated processes in chronic HCV infection, data on the enhanced expression of the IFN-gamma regulated IP-10 support earlier findings and may explain the composition of the hepatic cellular infiltrate. The data on enhanced expression of IFN-alpha/beta inducible genes might be germane to therapeutic considerations.
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PMID:Enhanced expression of interferon-regulated genes in the liver of patients with chronic hepatitis C virus infection: detection by suppression-subtractive hybridization. 1115 6

Induction of a Th1 immune response against viral infection of the CNS is important in contributing to viral clearance. The present studies demonstrate a role for the T cell chemoattractant chemokine Mig (monokine induced by IFN-gamma) in contributing to a Th1 response against mouse hepatitis virus infection of the CNS. Analysis of the kinetics of Mig expression revealed mRNA transcripts present at days 7 and 12 postinfection (p.i.) but not early (day 2) or late (day 35) in the infection. To determine functional significance, mouse hepatitis virus-infected mice were treated with anti-Mig antisera, and the severity of disease was evaluated. Such treatment resulted in a marked increase in mortality that correlated with a >3 log increase in viral burden within the brains as compared with control mice treated with normal rabbit serum. Anti-Mig-treated mice displayed a significant decrease (p < 0.005) in CD4(+) and CD8(+) T cell recruitment into the CNS as compared with normal rabbit serum-treated mice. In addition, anti-Mig treatment resulted in a significant decrease (p < 0.05) in levels of IFN-gamma and IFN-beta that coincided with increased (p < 0.02) expression of the anti-inflammatory Th2 cytokine IL-10 within the CNS. Collectively, these data indicate that Mig is important in contributing to host defense by promoting a protective Th1 response against viral infection of the CNS.
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PMID:Expression of Mig (monokine induced by interferon-gamma) is important in T lymphocyte recruitment and host defense following viral infection of the central nervous system. 1116 Feb 25


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