Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0243026 (sepsis)
52,417 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Platelet activating factor (PAF) is considered a key mediator in eliciting the immunologic and metabolic consequences of endotoxic shock and sepsis. Release of oxygen-derived radicals is one of the important and relevant actions of PAF. This study examines the direct and priming effects of PAF on superoxide anion release by perfused liver, isolated Kupffer cells and blood neutrophils. One hour after PAF infusion at a dose of 2.2 micrograms/kg body weight a significant amount of superoxide release (0.71 +/- 0.1 nmol/min/g liver) was measured in the perfused liver compared with the control livers (0.2 +/- 0.01). In the in vitro presence of either phorbol ester or opsonized zymosan, superoxide release following PAF treatment in vivo was significantly increased to 1.36 +/- 0.2 and 4.29 +/- 0.36, respectively. The administration of PAF receptor antagonist (SDZ 63-441) almost completely inhibited the release of this radical. Kupffer cells (KC1, KC2, KC3) and blood neutrophils isolated from PAF-treated rats were also primed for increased production when these cells were challenged in vitro by the activator of protein kinase C, opsonin-coated zymosan as well as the chemotactic factors, complement 5a and F-met-leu-phe. PAF added in vitro to the perfused livers, isolated Kupffer cells or neutrophils from normal animals stimulated the release of superoxide with or without the above agonists. The direct stimulatory effect of PAF on superoxide release was inhibited by the PAF receptor antagonist in vitro. The role of PAF in the LPS-induced superoxide release by the perfused liver was also examined by the administration of PAF antagonist in endotoxic rats. The antagonist inhibited the LPS-mediated superoxide release at 1 hr, but not at 3 hr post-treatment. These results indicate that PAF stimulates and primes the hepatic elements to release superoxide. PAF may be an important factor during the early phase of endotoxemia, while other bioactive substances may take over at a later phase. Therefore, PAF is a key mediator that can directly enhance the release of toxic oxygen-derived radicals which may contribute to organ failure during endotoxemia or sepsis.
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PMID:Platelet activating factor stimulates and primes the liver, Kupffer cells and neutrophils to release superoxide anion. 133 36

The contractile response of isolated vascular segments was studied in Yucatan miniature swine approximately 48 hr after induction of sepsis by intraperitoneal injection of live Escherichia coli. Compared to non-septic controls, segments of the cranial mesenteric artery from septic animals showed a significantly attenuated contractile response to the adrenergic receptor agonist norepinephrine (NE). The EC50 for NE increased from 1.1 +/- 0.3 to 6.3 +/- 2.0 microM and the Emax decreased from 1,010 +/- 179 to 387 +/- 75 mg tension/mg tissue. In contrast, segments of the pulmonary artery showed no significant difference in contractility to NE between sham-operated and septic animals. Mesenteric and pulmonary artery segments from both septic and control animals exhibited similar contraction to the protein kinase C activator phorbol-12, 13-dibutyrate. This suggests that the observed hyporeactivity to NE in porcine mesenteric artery segments is not simply due to cellular damage by toxins associated with the septic state. The results also indicate that the impact of gram-negative sepsis on vascular contractile function varies between tissue from the systemic and pulmonary circulation in pigs.
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PMID:Differential contractile responses of mesenteric and pulmonary artery segments to norepinephrine and phorbol ester in the septic pig. 151 8

Recruitment of inflammatory cells to the lung capillaries has been proposed as an important step in the sequence of events that lead to acute lung injury. Frequently, in the clinical setting, bacteremia and sepsis syndrome precede the acute lung failure and endotoxin priming may represent a comparable paradigm, useful for experimental pursuit. Following addition of the chemotactic tripeptide FMLP (10(-9) to 10(-6) M) to the cell-free, salt solution perfusate of isolated rat lungs, only a small degree of vasoconstriction was observed. However, in lungs isolated from rats that received 2 mg/kg intraperitoneal Salmonella enteritidis endotoxin 2 h before lung perfusion, FMLP dose dependently caused a large, transient pulmonary pressor response, edema formation, and release of large amounts of thromboxane and leukotriene B4. Since in vitro priming with endotoxin, direct vascular injury by neutrophil elastase, nor direct stimulation with FMLP of pulmonary artery rings from endotoxin-pretreated rats, mimicked the effects of in vivo endotoxin priming, we conclude that the presence of inflammatory cells in the lung capillaries accounted for the large amount of eicosanoids produced by the lungs after FMLP stimulation. In fact, by retrograde lavage of the lung circulation with a collagenase solution, previously adherent cell clumps were mobilized and identified. These cell clumps, composed of red blood cells, neutrophils, and platelets, were not seen in the vascular lavage sediment obtained from unprimed control lungs. Indomethacin, a thromboxane antagonist, AA861, a 5-lipoxygenase inhibitor, and WEB 2086, a platelet-activating factor (PAF) antagonist, reduced the thromboxane synthesis and release after FMLP (10(-7) M) in in vivo endotoxin-primed lungs. None of the inhibitors employed exclusively inhibited only one particular eicosanoid mediator but rather affected the release of several mediators, suggesting a close link between the different synthetic arachidonic acid pathways. An inhibitor of phospholipase C (2-nitro-4-carboxyphenyl-N,N-diphenylcarbamate), NCDC, but not an inhibitor of phospholipase D (Wortmannin) or of protein kinase C (staurosporine) inhibited the FMLP-stimulated pulmonary pressure rise and eicosanoid release in endotoxin-primed lungs in vivo. Our data suggest that eicosanoids (in particular thromboxane) released from cells trapped in the lung circulation, but not from constitutive lung cells, contribute to vasoconstriction and edema formation caused by the chemoattractant FMLP in endotoxin-primed lungs.
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PMID:FMLP causes eicosanoid-dependent vasoconstriction and edema in lungs from endotoxin-primed rats. 154 53

Cytokines have been implicated in the modulation of fat metabolism after sepsis. Carnitine palmitoyltransferase (CPT), the regulatory enzyme of hepatic mitochondrial long-chain fatty-acid oxidation, is involved in the control of hepatic fat oxidation in sepsis. Using either H4IIe rat hepatoma cells or rat hepatocytes in primary culture, we tested the hypothesis that interleukin-1-alpha (IL-1 alpha) would modulate CPT transcription (CPT mRNA), CPT translation (35S-methionine CPT protein incorporation), and hepatic mitochondrial oxidation of 1-Carbon 14-labeled (14C) palmitate to ketone bodies (acid soluble products). We showed that IL-1 alpha significantly increased CPT mRNA, 35S-methionine incorporation CPT protein, and hepatic mitochondrial oxidation of 1-14C-palmitate to acid soluble products. We further hypothesized that the Ca2+ second messenger system may play a role in the IL-1 alpha induction of hepatic CPT gene transcription. We showed that either calcium ionophore (A23187) or phorbol myristate acetate increased CPT gene transcription and that either calcium chelation, protein kinase C inhibition (acridine orange), or chronic exposure to phorbol myristate acetate significantly inhibited IL-1 alpha induction of CPT mRNA. We conclude that the IL-1 alpha increases in hepatic mitochondrial fatty-acid oxidation may be, in part, secondary to increased CPT gene transcription and translation and that the Ca2+ second messenger system may play an important role in IL-1 alpha induction of CPT gene transcription.
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PMID:The Ca2+ second messenger system and interleukin-1-alpha modulation of hepatic gene transcription and mitochondrial fat oxidation. 185 38

Activation of protein kinase C (PKC) by bacterial lipopolysaccharide had recently been implicated in the pathogenetic sequence of gram-negative sepsis, endotoxicosis, hyperinsulinism, and the alterations in glucoregulation that eventuate in glucose dyshomeostasis. This study used the peptide antibiotic polymyxin B (PMX-B) and H-7, an isoquinoline sulfonamide, as inhibitors of PKC activation to evaluate responses to provocative insulin and glucose tolerance tests in control vs. endotoxic rats. Fed male rats were treated with either Salmonella enteritidis endotoxin (ETX; 0.33 mg/kg iv) or saline 120 min before intravenous insulin tolerance testing (IVITT) with human insulin (1 U/kg) or intravenous glucose tolerance testing (IVGTT) with D-glucose (1.2 g/kg). H-7 in dimethyl sulfoxide at 25 mg/kg, PMX-B in saline at 0.25 mg/kg, or the respective vehicles were administered 5 min before the tolerance tests. Neither H-7 nor PMX-B had any significant acute effects on basal plasma glucose or lactate values. The decline in plasma with IVITT was augmented by ETX; however, concomitant H-7 or PMX-B attenuated the insulin hypoglycemia. The computed half-life of glucose in the IVGTT was decreased by ETX; however, concomitant H-7 or PMX-B decreased the tolerance alteration. In addition, both H-7 and PMX-B attenuated the rise in insulin induced by the IVGTT. Thus the hyperinsulinism and the glucoregulatory disturbances in endotoxicosis may be mediated by PKC activation and ameliorated by PKC inhibition.
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PMID:Antagonism of endotoxic glucose dyshomeostasis by protein kinase C inhibitors. 185 53

Previous studies have shown that thrombomodulin (TM) on endothelial cells is down-regulated by endotoxin, interleukin-1 beta (IL-1 beta), and tumor necrosis factor (TNF). This loss of anti-coagulant potential is thought to be related to the hypercoagulable state in sepsis, inflammation, and cancer. The current studies describe up-regulation of TM in human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs) by several compounds as judged by increased surface cofactor activity, surface TM antigen, and TM mRNA levels. Surface TM activity was increased by active phorbol esters (10(-8) M, 24-48 h), analogs of cAMP (1-10 mM, 4 h), and forskolin (10(-5) M, 24-48 h). Up-regulation of TM in HUVECs by 4 beta-phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA) and dibutyryl cAMP (dBcAMP) was due to de novo synthesis of TM protein resulting from increased TM mRNA levels. The results suggest that protein kinase C and protein kinase A may be involved in cellular regulatory mechanisms for TM expression. In addition, PMA effects on surface TM activity are biphasic, with an initial reduction followed by a significant enhancement. Hence, we propose that compounds capable of increasing intracellular cAMP concentrations in HUVECs may be useful in preventing thrombosis by increasing the anti-thrombotic properties of endothelial cells.
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PMID:Up-regulation of thrombomodulin in human umbilical vein endothelial cells in vitro. 196 58

Despite numerous reports, the role of tumor necrosis factor (TNF) in polymorphonuclear leukocyte (PMN) function remains controversial. We found TNF to be a potent, pertussis toxin-independent stimulator of PMN adhesion (ED50 2.6 pM). TNF-stimulated PMN under adherent conditions released up to 65% of their transcobalamine content (ED50 3.9 pM) and increased their burst activity 10-fold (ED50 3.2 pM) as measured by the hexose monophosphate shunt, whereas PMN held in suspension hardly degranulated at all and only little burst activity was demonstrable. However, preincubation of PMN with TNF in suspension led to a decrease in cellular adhesiveness, degranulation, and burst activity in response to a secondary stimulus of TNF under adherent conditions, although cells remained fully responsive toward phorbol myristate acetate. A concomitant dose-dependent decline of TNF receptor numbers that correlated well with the inhibition of PMN function (r = 0.91) suggests receptor down-regulation as the mechanism of functional PMN deactivation. Remarkably, preincubation with other PMN stimuli such as N-formyl-methionyl-leucyl-phenylalanine, platelet-activating factor, leukotriene B4, complement component fragment 5a (C5a)/C5a (desarginated), and endotoxin also led to a reduction of TNF-specific PMN responses (cross-deactivation) from 35% (LTB4) to 90% (endotoxin), corresponding with the down-regulation of TNF receptors. Deactivation and receptor down-regulation are independent of pertussis toxin-sensitive G proteins and protein kinase C but seemed to depend on changes in calcium metabolism. Granulocyte hyporesponsiveness towards TNF in sepsis (with elevated blood levels of endotoxin and TNF) might be a mechanism of self-protection or, to the contrary, might impair a possibly central mode of host defense.
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PMID:The tumor necrosis factor receptor and human neutrophil function. Deactivation and cross-deactivation of tumor necrosis factor-induced neutrophil responses by receptor down-regulation. 216 42

In pursuing the mechanism of endotoxin action, we examined the effect of lipopolysaccharide (LPS) and its chemically defined components, lipid A and lipid X on cultured bovine endothelial cells. We report that LPS and lipid A caused detachment and altered morphology of endothelial cells while lipid X did not. Phorbol myristate acetate, a compound known to activate protein kinase C, also caused endothelial cell detachment. Morphologic changes were readily apparent in the endothelial cells after 6 hours of exposure to lipopolysaccharide (1 microgram/ml); at that time many of the cells had contracted and formed bleblike structures on the surface. Large vacuoles, dense bodies, and pyknotic nuclei were found in the detaching cells, indicating necrosis or cell death. Preceding the morphologic changes and actual detachment, endothelial cell DNA and RNA synthesis was impaired by LPS. The changes in DNA and RNA synthesis occurred within 4 hours of exposure to 1 microgram/ml of LPS when the cells were still able to maintain normal levels of ATP. In addition to the inhibition of nucleic acid synthesis, protein synthesis was inhibited after 6 and 8 hours of LPS exposure. DNA, RNA, and protein synthesis returned to control levels after 24 hours of exposure. Investigation on the cultured bovine endothelial cells as a model for LPS action was useful in that these cells are sensitive to relatively low levels of LPS and the endothelium may be an important target in sepsis.
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PMID:Effects of lipopolysaccharide, lipid A, lipid X, and phorbol ester on cultured bovine endothelial cells. 245 32

A depression in aortic contractility has been previously demonstrated in rat intraperitoneal sepsis and during endotoxemia. In this study, we determined whether the mobilization of extracellular calcium (using 45Ca) and the release of intracellular calcium are altered in septic rat aorta when compared to sham-operated controls. The concentration of protein kinase C was also determined by using [3H] phorbol-12,13-dibutyrate (PDBu). We found that calcium influx was unaltered under basal conditions but that the ability of norepinephrine (NE) to augment influx was significantly depressed (P less than .05; [control vs. septic, 572 +/- 54 [SE] vs. 428 +/- 30 mumol Ca2+/kg dry wt. aorta]). Calcium influx stimulated by high K+ was unchanged in aortae between control and septic animals. In the presence of NE, calcium efflux (an indirect measurement of intracellular calcium release) was significantly diminished (P less than .001) in aortae from septic rats. The concentration of aortic protein kinase C as assessed by PDBu binding sites was unaltered in septic rats when compared with controls. In conclusion, we found that during sepsis alpha 1-adrenergic receptor activation of both calcium influx and efflux by NE is decreased; these alterations could be related to the depressed aortic contractility observed in sepsis.
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PMID:Alterations in bidirectional transmembrane calcium flux occur without changes in protein kinase C levels in rat aorta during sepsis. 283 8

The underlying mechanism of Ca2+ uptake function of cardiac sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) was investigated in the rat septic shock model produced by cecal ligation and puncture (CLP). The results are as follows. During the early phase of sepsis, the initial rate of ATP-dependent Ca2+ uptake by SR was decreased, while both the capacity of Ca2+ uptake and the activity of Ca(2+)-ATPase were unaffected. In the late sepsis, the impairment in SR function was even greater as the initial rate and the capacity of Ca2+ uptake by SR were significantly decreased, and this was paralleled by a reduction in Ca(2+)-ATPase activity. Although Ca2+ affinity (Km value) to calcium pump and the A0.5 values for Mg2+ and ATP activation on the Ca2+ uptake rate were unchanged, during sepsis the phosphorylation of SR vesicles by adding of catalytic subunit of the cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA), calmodulin, or the fragment of PKC into Ca2+ uptake buffer, failed to stimulate Ca2+ uptake activities of SR isolated from early or late septic rats. These data suggest that depression of cardiac SR function is aggravated as sepsis develops, the impairment of SR Ca2+ uptake is possibly based on a mechanism of defective phosphorylation of SR rather than the ionic and energic regulatory actions of Ca2+, Mg2+, ATP on cardiac SR.
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PMID:[Impaired calcium uptake by cardiac sarcoplasmic reticulum and its underlying mechanism during rat septic shock]. 748 74


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