Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0042384 (vasculitis)
20,525 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Iron-derived reactive oxygen species play an important role in the pathogenesis of various vascular disorders including vasculitis, atherosclerosis, and capillary leak syndromes such as the adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). We have suggested that acute incorporation of the heme moiety of hemoglobin released from red blood cells into endothelium could provide catalytically active iron to the vasculature. Adaptation to chronic heme stress involves the induction of heme oxygenase and ferritin; the latter provides cytoprotection against free radicals in vitro. The present studies examine the bioavailability of heme, derived from hemoglobin, to induce heme oxygenase and ferritin in rat lungs in vivo. Intravenous injection of methemoglobin, but not oxyhemoglobin, increases total lung heme oxygenase mRNA approximately fivefold after 16 h. Accompanying this mRNA induction, expression of total lung heme oxygenase enzyme activity is also markedly enhanced. In situ hybridization for heme oxygenase reveals mRNA accumulation in the lung microvascular endothelium, implying incorporation of heme into endothelial cells. Similarly, methemoglobin significantly increases the ferritin protein content of rat lungs and in parallel, ferritin light-chain mRNA increases approximately 1.6-fold, whereas heavy-chain mRNA is upregulated by approximately 1.9-fold. Immunoreactive ferritin is present in lung microvascular endothelium after methemoglobin treatment, suggesting incorporation of heme iron into pulmonary vasculature. Subcutaneous injection of Sn-protoporphyrin IX, a competitive inhibitor of heme oxygenase, does not affect methemoglobin-induced ferritin synthesis in lungs. We speculate that methemoglobin, which might be generated by activated leukocytes in ARDS associated with disseminated interavascular coagulation, can provide heme iron to lung microvascular endothelium to induce heme oxygenase and ferritin.
...
PMID:Endothelial cell heme oxygenase and ferritin induction in rat lung by hemoglobin in vivo. 786 52

Iron-derived reactive oxygen species are implicated in the pathogenesis of various vascular disorders including atherosclerosis, vasculitis, and reperfusion injury. The present studies examine whether heme, when liganded to physiologically relevant proteins as in hemoglobin, can provide potentially damaging iron to intact endothelium. We demonstrate that reduced ferrohemoglobin, while relatively innocuous to cultured endothelial cells, when oxidized to ferrihemoglobin (methemoglobin), greatly amplifies oxidant (H2O2)-mediated endothelial-cell injury. Drawing upon our previous observation that free heme similarly primes endothelium for oxidant damage, we posited that methemoglobin, but not ferrohemoglobin, releases its hemes that can then be incorporated into endothelial cells. In support, cultured endothelial cells exposed to methemoglobin--in contrast to exposure to ferrohemoglobin, cytochrome c, or metmyoglobin--rapidly increased their heme oxygenase mRNA and enzyme activity, thereby supporting heme uptake; ferritin production was also markedly increased after such exposure, thus attesting to eventual incorporation of Fe. These cellular methemoglobin effects were inhibited by the heme-scavenging protein hemopexin and by haptoglobin or cyanide, agents that strengthen the liganding between heme and globin. If the endothelium is exposed to methemoglobin for a more prolonged period (16 hr), it accumulates large amounts of ferritin; concomitantly, and presumably associated with iron sequestration by this protein, the endothelium converts from hypersusceptible to hyperresistant to oxidative damage. We conclude that when oxidation of hemoglobin facilitates release of its heme groups, catalytically active iron is provided to neighboring tissue environments. The effect of this relinquished heme on the vasculature is determined both by extracellular factors--i.e., plasma proteins, such as haptoglobin and hemopexin--as well as intracellular factors, including heme oxygenase and ferritin. Acutely, if both extra- and intracellular defenses are overwhelmed, cellular toxicity arises; chronically, when ferritin is induced, resistance to oxidative injury may supervene.
...
PMID:Endothelial-cell heme uptake from heme proteins: induction of sensitization and desensitization to oxidant damage. 841 93