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Query: UMLS:C0036690 (
sepsis
)
59,461
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
C1-inhibitor
is increasingly used experimentally and clinically in inflammatory conditions like
septicemia
and ischemia-reperfusion injury. Several mechanisms may account for the anti-inflammatory effects of
C1-inhibitor
, including inhibition of complement. The aim of the present study was to investigate and compare the supraphysiologic effect of
C1-inhibitor
on the three complement pathways. Novel assays for specific evaluation of the classical, lectin and alternative pathways were employed using normal human serum supplemented with increasing concentrations of
C1-inhibitor
. Solid-phase classical- and lectin pathway activation was dose-dependently and significantly reduced up to 85% in the range of 2-28 times physiologic
C1-inhibitor
concentration. The lectin pathway was more potently inhibited than the classical at low doses. A functional lectin pathway assay demonstrated a significant reduction of C4 deposition up to 86% even at low concentration of
C1-inhibitor
and documented the effect to be at the level of MBL/MASPs. In contrast,
C1-inhibitor
had no effect on solid-phase alternative pathway activation, but significantly reduced cobra venom factor-induced fluid-phase activation up to 88%. The negative controls albumin and IgG had no effect on complement activation. The positive inhibitory controls compstatin (C3 inhibition), EDTA- or MBL-deficient sera reduced complement activation by 82-100%. We conclude that
C1-inhibitor
in high physiologic doses differentially inhibits all three-complement pathways. The inhibition pattern was strikingly different in the classical and lectin pathway, compared to the alternative. Previous studies interpreting the effects of
C1-inhibitor
as only due to classical pathway inhibition needs reconsideration. The data has implications for the therapeutic use of
C1-inhibitor
.
...
PMID:Effect of supraphysiologic levels of C1-inhibitor on the classical, lectin and alternative pathways of complement. 1710 Nov 76
Therapeutic complement inhibition is a promising strategy for treatment of a number of diseases as judged from rodent studies. The species distance from rodents to humans may limit the clinical relevance of these studies. The pig is an alternative animal for studies of human diseases like
sepsis
and ischemia/reperfusion injury. However, available complement inhibitors for use in pigs are scarce. The aim of the present study was to investigate and compare the efficacy of selected candidate inhibitors of porcine complement in vitro for possible future application in vivo. Sera from three different pigs were each incubated with three different activators of the complement system (zymosan, heat-aggregated immunoglobulin G (HAIGG) and Escherichia coli). Three groups of complement inhibitor candidates were tested: serine protease inhibitors (FUT-175 and
C1-inhibitor
), monoclonal antibodies (anti-factor B (fB) and anti-factor D (fD)) and a recombinant regulatory protein (vaccinia virus complement control protein (VCP)). Read-out was the terminal C5b-9 complement complex (TCC). The serine protease inhibitors FUT-175 and
C1-inhibitor
dose-dependently inhibited TCC formation in zymosan-, HAIGG- and E. coli-activated porcine sera, but with different efficacy. Complete inhibition of TCC was obtained using 0.2 mg/mL FUT-175, but required 16 mg/mL of
C1-inhibitor
. The monoclonal anti-fB and -fD antibodies both inhibited TCC formation dose-dependently, but in different ways. Anti-fB at high dose (1 mg/mL) completely inhibited TCC formation in sera activated with zymosan and virtually completely in sera activated with HAIGG, but not in sera activated with E. coli. Anti-fD inhibited all three activators at low dose (0.05 mg/mL), and approximately 50% TCC reduction was obtained. The recombinant complement regulatory protein VCP efficiently and dose-dependently inhibited TCC formation with a complete inhibition found at 0.05 mg/mL for all three activators. All candidates tested inhibited porcine complement activation, but in different ways and to different degrees. Of the complement-specific candidates, VCP inhibited all activators completely at low doses.
...
PMID:Candidate inhibitors of porcine complement. 1710 63
Increased expression of adhesion molecules by activated endothelium is a critical feature of vascular inflammation associated with the several diseases such as endotoxin shock and
sepsis
/septic shock. Our data demonstrated complement regulatory protein
C1 inhibitor
(
C1INH
) prevents endothelial cell injury. We hypothesized that
C1INH
has the ability of an anti-endothelial activation associated with suppression of expression of adhesion molecule(s).
C1INH
blocked leukocyte adhesion to endothelial cell monolayer in both static assay and flow conditions. In inflammatory condition,
C1INH
reduced vascular cell adhesion molecule (VCAM-1) expression associated with its cytoplasmic mRNA destabilization and nuclear transcription level. Studies exploring the underlying mechanism of
C1INH
-mediated suppression in VCAM-1 expression were related to reduction of NF-kappaB activation and nuclear translocation in an IkappaBalpha-dependent manner. The inhibitory effects were associated with reduction of inhibitor IkappaB kinase activity and stabilization of the NF-kappaB inhibitor IkappaB. These findings indicate a novel role for
C1INH
in inhibition of vascular endothelial activation. These observations could provide the basis for new therapeutic application of
C1INH
to target inflammatory processes in different pathologic situations.
...
PMID:Suppression of complement regulatory protein C1 inhibitor in vascular endothelial activation by inhibiting vascular cell adhesion molecule-1 action. 1752 9
In spite of antibiotic treatment, pneumococcal meningitis continues to be associated with significant morbidity and mortality. The complement system is a key component of innate immunity against invading pathogens. However, activation of complement is also involved in tissue damage, and complement inhibition by
C1 inhibitor
(C1-inh) is beneficial in animal models of endotoxemia and
sepsis
. In the present study, we demonstrate classical pathway complement activation during pneumococcal meningitis in rats. We also evaluate the effect of C1-inh treatment on clinical illness, bacterial clearance, and inflammatory responses in rats and mice with pneumococcal meningitis. C1-inh treatment was associated with reduced clinical illness, a less-pronounced inflammatory infiltrate around the meninges, and lower brain levels of proinflammatory cytokines and chemokines. C1-inh treatment increased bacterial clearance, possibly through an up-regulation of CR3. Hence, C1-inh may be a useful agent in the treatment of pneumococcal meningitis.
...
PMID:C1 inhibitor treatment improves host defense in pneumococcal meningitis in rats and mice. 1753 91
C1 inhibitor
therapy improves outcome in several animal models of inflammatory disease. These include
sepsis
and Gram negative endotoxin shock, vascular leak syndromes, hyperacute transplant rejection, and ischemia-reperfusion injury. Furthermore, some data suggest a beneficial effect in human inflammatory disease. In many inflammatory conditions, complement system activation plays a role in pathogenesis. The contact system also very likely is involved in mediation of damage in inflammatory disease. Therefore, the beneficial effect of
C1 inhibitor
has been assumed to result from inhibition of one or both of these systems. Over the past several years, several other potential anti-inflammatory effects of
C1 inhibitor
have been described. These effects do not appear to require protease inhibition and depend on non-covalent interactions with other proteins, cell surfaces or lipids. In the first,
C1 inhibitor
binds to a variety of extracellular matrix components including type IV collagen, laminin, entactin and fibrinogen. The biologic role of these reactions is unclear, but they may serve to concentrate
C1 inhibitor
at extravascular inflammatory sites. The second is a non-covalent interaction with C3b that results in inhibition of formation of the alternative pathway C3 convertase, a function analogous to that of factor H. The third is an interaction with E and P selectins on endothelial cells that is mediated by the Lewis(x) tetrasaccharides that are expressed on
C1 inhibitor
. These interactions result in suppression of leukocyte rolling and transmigration. The fourth interaction is the binding of
C1 inhibitor
to Gram negative bacterial endotoxin that results in suppression of endotoxin shock by interference with the interaction of endotoxin with its receptor complex on macrophages. Lastly,
C1 inhibitor
binds directly to Gram negative bacteria, which leads to suppression of the development of
sepsis
, as demonstrated in the cecal ligation and puncture model. These observations suggest that
C1 inhibitor
is a multi-faceted anti-inflammatory protein that exerts its effects through a variety of mechanisms including both protease inhibition and several different non-covalent interactions that are unrelated to protease inhibition.
...
PMID:C1 inhibitor: biologic activities that are independent of protease inhibition. 1754 16
C1 inhibitor
(
C1INH
) protects mice from lethal Gram-negative bacterial LPS-induced endotoxin shock and blocks the binding of LPS to the murine macrophage cell line, RAW 264.7, via an interaction with lipid A. Using the cecal ligation and puncture (CLP) model for
sepsis
in mice, treatment with
C1INH
improved survival in comparison with untreated controls. The effect was not solely the result of inhibition of complement and contact system activation because reactive center-cleaved, inactive
C1INH
(iC1INH) also was effective. In vivo,
C1INH
and iC1INH both reduced the number of viable bacteria in the blood and peritoneal fluid and accelerated killing of bacteria by blood neutrophils and peritoneal macrophages. In vitro,
C1INH
bound to bacteria cultured from blood or peritoneal fluid of mice with CLP-induced
sepsis
, but had no direct effect on bacterial growth. However, both
C1INH
and iC1INH enhanced the bactericidal activity of blood neutrophils and peritoneal exudate leukocytes.
C1INH
-deficient mice (C1INH-/- mice) subjected to CLP had a higher mortality than did wild-type littermate mice. Survival of
C1INH
-/- mice was significantly increased with two doses of
C1INH
, one given immediately following CLP, and the second at 6 h post-CLP.
C1INH
may be important in protection from
sepsis
through enhancement of bacterial uptake by, and/or bactericidal capacity of, phagocytes. Treatment with
C1INH
may provide a useful additional therapeutic approach in some patients with peritonitis and/or
sepsis
.
...
PMID:C1 inhibitor-mediated protection from sepsis. 1778 34
Plasma kallikrein kinin system (KKS) activation along with its cellular receptors expression are increased after injury and in patients with septic shock, hypotensive bacteremia and rhesus monkey infected with Salmonella typhimurium. KKS signaling cascade is activated by activated factor XII (FXIIa, Hageman factor)- and prolylcarboxypeptidase (PRCP)-dependent pathways on endothelial cells. Among the many entities that comprise the KKS, high molecular weight kininogen (HK), a bradykinin precursor, is critical in the assembly and activation of this system. HK is primarily expressed in the liver and secreted into the bloodstream. The activation of the KKS influences the permeability of the endothelium by liberating bradykinin (BK) from HK. BK is a potent inflammatory peptide which stimulates constitutive bradykinin B2 and inducible B1 receptors to release nitric oxide and prostacyclin. Regardless of the triggers, PK can only be activated on HK bound to the artificial negatively charged or to cell membrane surfaces. Since LPS has a negatively charged moiety and the ability to induce inflammatory responses in human, we determined the interaction between LPS and HK. HKH19 (HK cell binding site) and heparin inhibited LPS binding to HK with IC(50)s of 15nM and 20 microg/ml, respectively.
C1-inhibitor
and N-acetylglucosamine glycan inhibited LPS binding to HK with IC(50)s of about 10 microg/ml and 10mM, respectively. This novel study underscores the implication of HK in infection. We propose that HKH19, heparin, and
C1-inhibitor
present therapeutic potential for the treatment of
sepsis
and hypotensive bacteremia.
...
PMID:Identification of lipopolysaccharide binding site on high molecular weight kininogen. 1808 12
C1 inhibitor
is a potent anti-inflammatory protein as it is the major inhibitor of proteases of the contact and the complement systems.
C1-inhibitor
administration is an effective therapy in the treatment of patients with hereditary angioedema (HAE) who are genetically deficient in
C1 inhibitor
. Owing to its ability to modulate the contact and complement systems and the convincing safety profile, plasma-derived
C1 inhibitor
is an attractive therapeutic protein to treat inflammatory diseases other than HAE. In the present review we give an overview of the biology of
C1 inhibitor
and its use in HAE. Furthermore, we discuss
C1 inhibitor
as an experimental therapy in diseases such as
sepsis
and myocardial infarction.
...
PMID:C1 inhibitor: just a serine protease inhibitor? New and old considerations on therapeutic applications of C1 inhibitor. 1861 73
Broadly speaking,
C1 inhibitor
plays important roles in the regulation of vascular permeability and in the suppression of inflammation. Vascular permeability control is exerted largely through inhibition of two of the proteases involved in the generation of bradykinin, factor XIIa and plasma kallikrein (the plasma kallikrein-kinin system). Anti-inflammatory functions, however, are exerted via several activities including inhibition of complement system proteases (C1r, C1s, MASP2) and the plasma kallikrein-kinin system proteases, in addition to interactions with a number of different proteins, cells and infectious agents. These more recently described, as yet incompletely characterized, activities serve several potential functions, including concentration of
C1 inhibitor
at sites of inflammation, inhibition of alternative complement pathway activation, inhibition of the biologic activities of gram negative endotoxin, enhancement of bacterial phagocytosis and killing, and suppression of the influx of leukocytes into a site of inflammation.
C1 inhibitor
has been shown to be therapeutically useful in a variety of animal models of inflammatory diseases, including gram negative bacterial
sepsis
and endotoxin shock, suppression of hyperacute transplant rejection, and treatment of a variety of ischemia-reperfusion injuries (heart, intestine, skeletal muscle, liver, brain). In humans, early data appear particularly promising in myocardial reperfusion injury. The mechanism (or mechanisms) of the effect of
C1 inhibitor
in these conditions is (are) not completely clear, but involve inhibition of complement and contact system activation, in addition to variable contributions from other
C1 inhibitor
activities that do not involve protease inhibition.
...
PMID:Biological activities of C1 inhibitor. 1867 18
The study's objective was to determine the effects of the administration of combinations of
C1 esterase inhibitor
(
C1-INH
) with coagulation factor XIII (F XIII) and N-acetylcysteine (NAC) with tirilazad mesylate (TM) on leukocyte adherence and on intestinal functional capillary density during experimental endotoxemia in rats. In a prospective, randomized, controlled animal study, 40 male Wistar rats were divided into 4 groups. Group 1 (CON group) served as control group. Group 2 (LPS group), group 3 (C1-INH+F XIII group) and group 4 (NAC+TM group) received endotoxin infusions (10 mg/kg/h for 2 h). In C1-INH+F XIII group, 100 U/kg b.w.
C1-INH
and 50 U/kg b.w. F XIII were administered after the first 30 min of endotoxemia. In the NAC+TM group, 150 mg/kg b.w. N-acetylcysteine and 10 mg/kg b.w. Tirilazad mesylate were administered after 30 min of endotoxemia. Leukocyte adherence at venules of the intestinal submucosal layer and functional capillary density in the villi intestinales and in the longitudinal and circular muscle layers were estimated by intravital fluorescence microscopy (IVM). C1-INH+F XIII reduced the count of firmly adherent leukocytes that was increased after LPS administration in the V3 venules (CON group 69 (17-160)/mm2; LPS group 635 (556-814)/mm2; C1-INH+F XIII group 503 (337-646)/mm2). NAC+TM reduced the firmly adherent leukocytes in the V3 venules (NAC+TM group 403 (309-572)/mm2) and in the V1 venules (CON group 55 (16-131)/mm2; LPS group 368 (306-475)/mm2; NAC+TM group 270 (216-308)/mm2) as well. FCD was not impaired after LPS challenge and there was no influence of both combinations on the FCD. We conclude that both drug combinations can reduce the leukocyte adherence in a
sepsis
model in rats.
...
PMID:The combinations C1 esterase inhibitor with coagulation factor XIII and N-acetylcysteine with tirilazad mesylate reduce the leukocyte adherence in an experimental endotoxemia in rats. 1902 42
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