Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0020538 (
hypertension
)
170,190
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Rats were killed after 6 weeks of continuous ingestion of the pneumotoxic alkaloid monocrotaline (2.2 mg/kg/day), the neutrophil elastase inhibitor SC39026 (60 mg/kg/day), or both. Pulmonary reactions were evaluated by light and electron microscopy. Lung endothelial function was monitored by angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) activity, plasminogen activator (PLA) activity, and prostacyclin (PGI2) and thromboxane (TXA2) production. Lung hydroxyproline content was measured as an index of interstitial fibrosis. Cardiac right ventricular hypertrophy was determined by the right ventricle to the left ventricle plus septum weight ratio (RV/LV + S). Rats receiving SC39026 alone did not differ significantly from untreated control animals with respect to any of the quantitative endpoints, although rarefaction of Type I pneumocytes was observed in the electron micrographs of these animals.
Monocrotaline
-treated rats, in contrast, developed a significant increase in RV/LV + S, and exhibited pulmonary edema, inflammation, fibrosis, and muscularization and occlusive mural thickening of the pulmonary small arteries and arterioles. These monocrotaline-induced structural changes were accompanied by decreased lung ACE and PLA activities, and increased PGI2 and TXA2 production, and by an increase in lung hydroxyproline content. Cotreatment with SC39026 ameliorated the monocrotaline-induced pulmonary vascular wall thickening and the cardiac right ventricular hypertrophy. These data suggest that inappropriate neutrophil elastase activity contributes to monocrotaline pulmonary vasculopathy and
hypertension
. On the other hand, cotreatment with SC39026 had no significant effect on the severity of the monocrotaline-induced lung inflammatory reaction, the pulmonary endothelial dysfunction, or the increase in lung hydroxyproline content.
...
PMID:Monocrotaline-induced cardiopulmonary injury in rats. Modification by the neutrophil elastase inhibitor SC39026. 254 80
The pyrrolizidine alkaloid monocrotaline produces pulmonary inflammation, hemorrhage, fibrosis, and
hypertension
. In rats, monocrotaline pneumotoxicity can be ameliorated by cotreatment with inhibitors of angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE), such as CL242817. In the present study, serum and urine copper (Cu) concentrations were evaluated as indices of cardiopulmonary injury in rats sacrificed after six weeks of continuous administration of monocrotaline (0 to 3.6 mg per kg per day, in the drinking water) or CL242817 (60 mg per kg per day, in the feed), or both.
Monocrotaline
-treated rats exhibited dose-dependent increases in (1) pulmonary histopathology, (2) pulmonary endothelial dysfunction (decreased lung plasminogen activator activity, and increased prostacyclin and thromboxane production), (3) pulmonary hydroxyproline (collagen) content, and (4) cardiac right ventricular hypertrophy (an anatomic correlate of pulmonary hypertension). The severity of cardiopulmonary damage was accompanied by a dose-dependent elevation in serum Cu concentration. Serum iron concentration, in contrast, did not change. Urinary Cu concentration correlated roughly with that of serum, but the variability within groups was high. Cotreatment with the ACE inhibitor CL242817 not only ameliorated monocrotaline-induced right heart enlargement and lung hydroxyproline accumulation but also reduced the hypercupremia in monocrotaline-treated rats. Thus, serum copper concentration appears to be an accurate and minimally invasive index of monocrotaline pneumotoxicity in this model of pulmonary hypertension.
...
PMID:Serum copper concentration as an index of cardiopulmonary injury in monocrotaline-treated rats. 314 70
Adrenomedullin is a strong vasorelaxing peptide discovered in pheochromocytoma tissue.
Monocrotaline
, a pyrrolizidine alkaloid derived from Crotalaria spectabilis, is known to cause pulmonary hypertension. To test the hypothesis that adrenomedullin plays a role similar to that of atrial natriuretic peptide or brain natriuretic peptide in modulating right ventricular responses to pulmonary hypertension, we have compared concentrations of immunoreactive rat adrenomedullin and adrenomedullin messenger RNA levels in tissues of monocrotaline treated rats with those of control rats. We also measured the effect of pulmonary hypertension on plasma level of the peptide. The concentrations of adrenomedullin immunoreactivity in right ventricle and plasma were significantly higher in monocrotaline treated rats than in control rats. The messenger RNA level of adrenomedullin in right ventricle was also higher in monocrotaline treated rats than in control rats. These results suggest that adrenomedullin participates in the mechanism to counteract the
high blood pressure
in pulmonary circulation.
...
PMID:Augmented adrenomedullin concentrations in right ventricle and plasma of experimental pulmonary hypertension. 747 19
Monocrotaline
(MONO), a pyrrolizidine alkaloid, causes pulmonary arterial
hypertension
and right ventricular hypertrophy due to hepatic metabolism to the alkylating pyrrole dehydromonocrotaline. Taurine a sulfonic amino acid, is hepato- and cardioprotective in a variety of conditions. We have examined the effects of taurine and its amidino analog, guanidinoethane sulfonate (GES), in rats injected i.p. with MONO (65 mg/kg). Taurine and GES were given as 1% solutions in drinking water beginning 14 days before administration of MONO and continuing for 14 days therafter, when the rats were killed. The MONO group had right ventricular hypertrophy and pulmonary hyperplasia. Compared with control, no significant changes in the right ventricle/left ventricle weight ratio, or the right ventricle/body weight ratio occurred in rats also given taurine of GES. Lung weights in these two groups were higher than in the control group, but below that of the MONO-alone group. The lethality of MONO over 14 days was decreased by taurine (LD50 for MONO alone 80 mg/kg; for MONO + taurine 121 mg/kg). Rats given only MONO had lower hepatic concentrations of GSH and cysteine (Cys), and higher activities of microsomal GSH transferase activity were no different from control. Gamma-Glutamylcysteine (Glu-Cys) synthetase and gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase activities were elevated. In MONO-injected rats given GES, hepatic GSH levels were higher and Cys levels were lower than in either the MONO alone or MONO + taurine groups. Gamma-Glu-Cys synthetase activity was depressed. Microsomal GSH transferase, GSH peroxidase and gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase activities were elevated. Livers of MONO-injected animals showed higher levels of serine (reversed by both taurine and GES) and glycine (Gly; reversed by GES) and lower levels of glutamine. Compared with control rats, the following changes occurred in serum amino acids: MONO alone: increased aspartate, taurine and lysine; taurine-supplemented: increased taurine, methionine (Met) and lysine, and decreased Gly; GES-supplemented: decreased asparagine, serine, Gly, arginine, taurine, and valine. Compared with the MONO-alone group, the taurine-supplemented group had higher glutamate (Glu), Met and alanine, and the GES-supplemented group higher alanine and lower serine, Gly, arginine and valine. We conclude that taurine protects against MONO-induced lethality and right ventricular hypertrophy. GES also protects against right ventricular hypertrophy. However, these agents act by different mechanisms, taurine preventing many of the biochemical changes induced by MONO, with GES inducing additional changes.
...
PMID:Effects of taurine and guanidinoethane sulfonate on toxicity of the pyrrolizidine alkaloid monocrotaline. 857 99
Monocrotaline
(MONO), a pyrrolizidine alkaloid, causes veno-occlusive disease of the liver, pulmonary arterial
hypertension
, and right ventricular hypertrophy. Toxicity is due to the hepatic formation of a pyrolic metabolite that can be detoxified by conjugation with glutathione (GSH). We have shown that the GSH content of the liver affects the quantity of the pyrrolic metabolite that is released from the liver. We have now examined whether MONO, in turn, affects GSH metabolism. Twenty-four hours after administration of MONO to rats (65 mg/kg, i.p.), the highest concentration of bound pyrrolic metabolites was found in the liver, followed by the lung and kidney. Heart and brain contained lower concentrations of these metabolites. Significantly higher levels of GSH were found in liver and lungs of MONO-treated rats than in saline-injected control animals. In the liver, activities of the following enzymes were elevated: gamma-glutamylcysteine synthetase, GSH synthetase, gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase, dipeptidase, and microsomal GSH transferase. The same changes were seen in the lung. In the heart, gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase activity was decreased markedly, and cytosolic GSH transferase activity was elevated. In the kidney, the activities of GSH synthetase, gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase, and cytosolic GSH transferase were increased. Our results establish a mutual interaction of MONO and sulfur metabolism. It appears that an early metabolic action of MONO is to modify sulfur amino acid metabolism, diverting cysteine metabolism from oxidation to taurine towards synthesis of GSH.
...
PMID:Effects of monocrotaline, a pyrrolizidine alkaloid, on glutathione metabolism in the rat. 857 5
Monocrotaline
pyrrole (MCTP) causes pulmonary vascular endothelial cell (EC) injury followed by progressive pulmonary vascular leak in vivo and the inhibition of EC proliferation in vitro. It was hypothesized that MCTP inhibits cell proliferation in vitro by interfering with cell cycle progression in a cycle phase-specific manner. Furthermore, it was proposed that early alterations in MCTP-induced lung injury leading to
hypertension
were associated with a similar inhibition of EC proliferation. Subconfluent cultures of bovine pulmonary artery endothelial cells (BECs) were synchronized with aphidicolin (APH), a reversible G1-S phase inhibitor. Upon removal of APH, BECs were exposed to MCTP (5 micrograms/ml) or its vehicle for a 4-h interval corresponding to either the G1-S, S-G2, or G2 through mitosis (M) phases of the cell cycle. Fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS) was used to identify MCTP-induced changes in cell cycle progression in BECs, and the transit of S phase cells through the cycle was characterized through the incorporation of bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU). Synchronized BECs exposed to MCTP between mid-S-G2 or G2 through M were briefly delayed in G2-M at 12 h but underwent cell division by 24 h. By contrast, BECs treated with MCTP immediately after release from APH block became arrested in G2-M at 24 h and showed evidence of continued DNA synthesis and hypertetraploidy, but they did not divide. In vivo, MCTP (3.5 mg/kg i.v.) administration caused an increase in arterial EC BrdU incorporation between Days 3 and 7, but no increase in EC density. During this same interval, pulmonary vascular permeability increased and persisted. In summary, MCTP inhibits cell proliferation in a cell cycle phase-dependent manner in vitro. The results suggest that a similar mechanism could occur in vivo and may be associated with delayed EC repair, a process that could contribute to persistent pulmonary vascular leak.
...
PMID:The response of pulmonary vascular endothelial cells to monocrotaline pyrrole: cell proliferation and DNA synthesis in vitro and in vivo. 963 Apr 51
Interaction between locally released endothelin-1 (ET-1) and the endothelial ET(B)receptor could modulate pulmonary vascular tone. We evaluated pulmonary ET-1 clearance and ET-1-ET(B)receptor interaction in the modulation of pulmonary vascular tone. Controls and rats with
Monocrotaline
(
MCT
)-induced pulmonary hypertension (PH) were studied. Lungs were isolated and perfused under constant pressure. The effect of the selective ET(B)antagonist BQ-788 (10(-12)-10(-8)mole) on perfusion flow rate and(125)I-ET-1 extraction was determined. Baseline(125)I-ET-1 extraction was reduced from 62+/-5% in controls to 49+/-10% in PH (P=0.012). BQ-788 inhibited extraction with a higher half-inhibitory dose in the
MCT
group (-Log ID(50)= 8.9+/-0.4 vs. 9.5+/-0.1, P=0.03). BQ-788 induced a mild reduction in perfusion flow rate of 0.7+/-0.3 ml/min in controls. In the
MCT
group, this occurred at a lower dose and was more pronounced with a maximal reduction of 3.3+/-0.7 ml/min (P<0.01 vs. control). ET-1 was undetectable in the effluent at baseline but was present in similar concentrations in both groups after ET(B)blockade. Addition of 2 pg/ml ET-1 to lung perfusate did not modify pulmonary ET-1 clearance or the effect of BQ788 on perfusion flow rate in control lungs. In normal rat lungs, the ET(B)receptor plays a minor regulatory role on vascular tone. In
MCT
hypertension
however, despite a reduction in ET(B)mediated extraction, luminal production of ET-1 attenuates the increase in pulmonary vascular tone.
...
PMID:Importance of local production of endothelin-1 and of the ET(B)Receptor in the regulation of pulmonary vascular tone. 1087 51
Monocrotaline
(
MCT
), a pyrrolizidine alkaloid extracted from the shrub Crotalaria spectabilis, induces in the lungs of many mammalian species severe
hypertension
and fibrosis. Previous work with
MCT
-induced lung disease in rats has shown that some of the steps to progressive fibrosis can be interrupted or decreased by intervention with retinoic acid (RA) or with the angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor, captopril. This report emphasizes the pathology and cytokines present in lungs of rats in the
MCT
model of
hypertension
and fibrosis in 8 treatment groups, six per group: (1) controls, not treated; (2) captopril; (3) RA; (4) combined captopril and RA. Groups 5-8 replicated groups 1-4 and also received
MCT
subcutaneously. Tissues were harvested at 28 days for histopathology and measurement of cytokines TGFbeta, TNFalpha, interleukin 6, and IFN_. TGFbeta was depressed at 28 days by
MCT
, an effect reversed by a combination of captopril and RA. RA influences production of an important Th1 cytokine, IFN_, and demonstrated the greatest limitation of
MCT
-induced TNFalpha. The
MCT
-induced lung pathology of vasculitis, interstitial pneumonia and fibrosis was limited by captopril. Smooth muscle actin was overexpressed in
MCT
treated animals receiving RA, an effect reduced with captopril. Overall, the study confirmed the existence of a protective effect for both captopril and RA from
MCT
-induced lung damage at 30 days. No synergistic or antagonistic activity was observed when the two drugs were administered together. Each of the drugs exerts different and particular effects on serum and tissue levels of various cytokines, suggesting that each drug is efficient at different points of attack in the control of lung fibrosis.
...
PMID:Effects on cytokines and histology by treatment with the ACE inhibitor captopril and the antioxidant retinoic acid in the monocrotaline model of experimentally induced lung fibrosis. 1750 18
Monocrotaline
(
MCT
)-induced pulmonary artery
hypertension
(PAH) in rats is preceded by an inflammatory response, progressive endothelial cell membrane disruption, reduction in the expression of caveolin-1, and reciprocal activation of STAT3 (PY-STAT3). Superoxide and NF-kappaB have been implicated in PAH. To evaluate the role of caveolin-1, PY-STAT3 activation, and superoxide in PAH,
MCT
-injected rats were treated daily with pyrrolidine dithiocarbamate (PDTC; starting on days 1, 3, and 14 x 2 wk), an inhibitor of inflammation and NF-kappaB activation. Hemodynamic data, the expression of inhibitory (I)-kappaBalpha, caveolin-1, and Tie2 (a membrane protein), activation of PY-STAT3 and NF-kappaB, and superoxide chemiluminescence were examined. Rats developed progressive PAH at 2 wk post-
MCT
. There was progressive reduction in the expression of caveolin-1, Tie2, and activation of PY-STAT3 in the lungs. Reduction in I-kappaBalpha expression was present at 2 and 4 wk post-
MCT
. Superoxide chemiluminescence and NF-kappaB activation were observed only at 2 wk post-
MCT
and both decreased by 4 wk post-
MCT
despite progressive PAH. PDTC (starting on days 1 and 3) rescued caveolin-1 and Tie2, reversed
MCT
-induced PY-STAT3 activation, and attenuated PAH. In addition, PDTC restored I-kappaBalpha expression and reduced superoxide chemiluminescence at 2 wk but did not inhibit NF-kappaB activation despite attenuation of PAH. PDTC had no effect on established PAH. Increased superoxide chemiluminescence and NF-kappaB activation appear to be a transient phenomenon in the
MCT
model. Thus the disruption of endothelial cell membrane integrity resulting in caveolin-1 loss and reciprocal activation of PY-STAT3 plays a key role in the
MCT
-induced PAH.
...
PMID:Pyrrolidine dithiocarbamate restores endothelial cell membrane integrity and attenuates monocrotaline-induced pulmonary artery hypertension. 1839 Aug 33
1. Suppressing apoptosis and downregulating K(+) channels in pulmonary artery smooth muscle cells (PASMC) have been implicated in the development of pulmonary vascular medial hypertrophy and pulmonary arterial
hypertension
(PAH). Previous studies have shown that selective serotonin re-uptake inhibitors (SSRIs) protected against PAH. The aim of the present study was to investigate the involvement of Kv1.5 channels and apoptosis in the protective effect of the SSRI fluoxetine against PAH. 2.
Monocrotaline
(
MCT
) was used to establish PAH in Wistar rats. Fluoxetine (2 and 10 mg/kg per day) was administered by gavage once a day for 3 weeks. Three weeks after the induction of PAH by
MCT
, pulmonary haemodynamic measurements and pulmonary artery morphological assessments were undertaken, along with detection of apoptosis and Kv1.5. 3. Fluoxetine (2 and 10 mg/kg per day) decreased pulmonary artery pressure, reduced the right ventricular index and inhibited the increase in medial wall thickness of pulmonary arteries in established PAH. Fluoxetine (10 mg/kg per day) reduced the expression of Bcl-2 and Bcl-xL protein, increased the expression of cleaved caspase 3 protein and enhanced the expression of Kv1.5 protein and mRNA in pulmonary arteries. Furthermore, fluoxetine (10 mg/kg per day) significantly suppressed proliferation and enhanced apoptosis of PASMC in
MCT
-induced PAH. 4. In conclusion, fluoxetine protects against
MCT
-induced PAH by suppressing PASMC proliferation, inducing PASMC apoptosis and upregulating Kv1.5 channels.
...
PMID:Fluoxetine protects against monocrotaline-induced pulmonary arterial hypertension: potential roles of induction of apoptosis and upregulation of Kv1.5 channels in rats. 1929 36
1
2
3
Next >>