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Query: UMLS:C0242706 (
hyperoxia
)
5,219
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Therapy with high oxygen concentrations (
hyperoxia
) is often necessary to treat patients with respiratory failure. However,
hyperoxia
may exacerbate the development of acute lung injury, perhaps by increasing lung epithelial cell death. Therefore, interrupting lung epithelial cell death is an important protective and therapeutic strategy. In the present study,
hyperoxia
(95% O(2)) results in murine lung epithelium cell death by DNA-laddering, terminal deoxynucleotidyltransferase dUTP nick end labeling, and Annexin V-fluorescein isothiocyanate flow cytometry assay. We show that
hyperoxia
increases superoxide production, as assessed by nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate reduced (NADPH) oxidase activity and flow cytometric assay, and increases phospho-extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK)1/2 by Western blot analysis. These processes are inhibited by a reactive oxygen species inhibitor, diphenylene iodonium (DPI), and by an inhibitor of the mitogen-activated protein (MAP) or ERK kinase (
MEK
)/ERK1/2 pathway, PD98059. ERK1/2 activation in
hyperoxia
is also inhibited by DPI.
Hyperoxia
-induced cell death is associated with cytochrome c release, subsequent caspase 9 and 3 activation, and poly (ADP-ribosyl) polymerase cleavage, which can all be suppressed by DPI and PD98059. However, the broad caspase inhibitor z-VAD-FMK protects cells from death without affecting superoxide generation and ERK1/2 activation. Taken together, our data suggest that
hyperoxia
, by virtue of activating NADPH oxidase, generates reactive oxygen species (ROS), which mediates cell death of lung epithelium via ERK1/2 MAPK activation, and functions upstream of caspase activation in lung epithelial cells.
...
PMID:Reactive oxygen species and extracellular signal-regulated kinase 1/2 mitogen-activated protein kinase mediate hyperoxia-induced cell death in lung epithelium. 1259 56
Acute lung injury is a frequent and treatment-limiting consequence of therapy with 100% oxygen. Previous studies have determined that both interleukin (IL)-6 and IL-11 are protective in oxygen toxicity. This protection was associated with markedly diminished alveolar-capillary protein leak, endothelial and epithelial membrane injury, lipid peroxidation, and pulmonary neutrophil recruitment.
Hyperoxia
also caused cell death with DNA fragmentation in the lungs of transgene (-) animals, and both IL-6 and IL-11 markedly diminished this cell death response. However, the mechanism(s) by which these cytokines protect cells from death is unclear. In the present study, we characterized the effects of H2O2 on subconfluent human umbilical vein endothelial cell (HUVEC) and human pulmonary microvascular endothelial cell (HPMEC) cultures. We found that preincubation of HUVEC cultures with either IL-6 or IL-11 diminished H2O2 (1.0 mM)-induced cell death. Similar effects were noted with HPMEC showing that this effect is not HUVEC-specific. The protective effects of both IL-6 and IL-11 were not associated with any changes in antioxidants and were decreased by approximately 80% in the presence of U0126, a specific inhibitor of
MEK
-1-dependent pathways. The cytoprotective effects of IL-11 and IL-6 were also completely eliminated in STAT3 dominant-negative transduced HUVEC cultures. These studies demonstrate that IL-6 and IL-11 both confer cytoprotective effects that diminish oxidant-mediated endothelial cell injury. They also demonstrate that this protection is mediated, at least in part, by a STAT3 and
MEK
-1-dependent specific signal transduction pathway(s).
...
PMID:Interleukin-11 and interleukin-6 protect cultured human endothelial cells from H2O2-induced cell death. 1273 73
Oxidative stress plays a major role in
hyperoxia
-induced acute lung injury. We have shown previously that mice lacking the Nrf2 are more susceptible to
hyperoxia
than are wild-type mice. Nrf2 activates antioxidant response element (ARE)-mediated gene expression involved in cellular protection against toxic insults. The present study was designed to investigate the mechanisms that control the activation of Nrf2 by
hyperoxia
using a non-malignant murine alveolar epithelial cell line, C10. No significant alteration in the levels of Nrf2 mRNA and protein was found following exposure to
hyperoxia
. In contrast,
hyperoxia
caused the translocation of Nrf2 from the cytoplasm to the nucleus within 30-60 min of exposure. Consistent with these observations, gel shift and reporter analyses demonstrated a correlation between the
hyperoxia
-enhanced ARE DNA-binding activity of Nrf2 and an up-regulation of ARE-driven transcription. Inhibition of NADPH oxidase with diphenyleneiodonium (DPI) blocked both Nrf2 translocation and ARE-mediated transcription. Inhibition of the
MEK
/ERK pathway caused a similar effect. Consistent with this finding,
hyperoxia
stimulated ERK-1 and ERK-2 phosphorylation, whereas DPI or N-acetyl-l-cysteine blocked such activation.
Hyperoxia
stimulated the phosphorylation of endogenous Nrf2, but not in the presence of U0126, suggesting a critical role for ERK signaling in the activation of Nrf2. Consistent with this notion,
hyperoxia
did not stimulate the phosphorylation of Nrf2 in fibroblasts lacking the ERK-1. Collectively, our findings suggest that
hyperoxia
-induced, ARE-driven, Nrf2-dependent transcription is controlled by NADPH oxidase and ERK-1 signaling.
...
PMID:NADPH oxidase and ERK signaling regulates hyperoxia-induced Nrf2-ARE transcriptional response in pulmonary epithelial cells. 1529 79
Inosine, a naturally occurring purine with anti-inflammatory properties, was assessed as a possible modulator of hyperoxic damage to the pulmonary alveolar epithelium. Rats were treated with inosine, 200 mg/kg ip, twice daily during 48-h exposure to >90% oxygen. The alveolar epithelial type 2 cells (AEC2) were then isolated and cultured. AEC2 isolated from inosine-treated hyperoxic rats had less DNA damage and had increased antioxidant status compared with AEC2 from hyperoxic rats. Inosine treatment during
hyperoxia
also reduced the proportion of AEC2 in S and G2/M phases of the cell cycle and increased levels of the DNA repair enzyme 8-oxoguanine DNA glycosylase. Bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) recovered from hyperoxic, inosine-treated rats contained threefold higher levels of active transforming growth factor-beta than BAL from rats exposed to
hyperoxia
alone, and Smad2 was activated in AEC2 isolated from these animals. ERK1/2 was activated both in freshly isolated and 24-h-cultured AEC2 by in vivo inosine treatment, whereas blockade of the MAPK pathway in vitro reduced the protective effect of in the vivo inosine treatment. Together, the data suggest that inosine treatment during hyperoxic exposure results in protective signaling mediated through pathways downstream of
MEK
. Thus inosine may deserve further evaluation for its potential to reduce hyperoxic damage to the pulmonary alveolar epithelium.
...
PMID:In vivo inosine protects alveolar epithelial type 2 cells against hyperoxia-induced DNA damage through MAP kinase signaling. 1557 26