Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P30536 (PBS)
9,886 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The ability of conjugated isomers of linoleic acid (CLA) to prevent reduced growth rate following endotoxin (lipopolysaccharide, LPS) injection was studied in two chick trials and one rat trial. Chicks (10 per treatment) were fed a corn and soybean meal-based diet with or without .5% CLA. At 21 days of age, chicks were weighed and injected i.p. with 1 mg/kg BW Escherichia coli LPS and sterile PBS. Body weights were again determined 24 h later. Antibody responses to SRBC were also determined. Rats fed .5% stearic acid or CLA for 4 wk (seven per treatment) were also injected with LPS, and BW change over a 24-h postinjection period was determined. Antibody responses to BSA, phytohemagglutinin foot pad swelling, and phagocytosis of elicited peritoneal macrophages were also determined. The CLA had no adverse effects on any immune variables measured in the chicks and rats. The CLA enhanced the phytohemagglutinin response and macrophage phagocytosis in rats. Chicks fed CLA and injected with LPS continued to grow, whereas those not fed CLA either failed to grow or lost weight following LPS injection. Both control and CLA-fed rats lost weight over the 24-h period after LPS injection; however, the loss of weight in rats fed CLA was only half of the weight loss of the control rats. Thus, CLA is effective in preventing the catabolic effects of immune stimulation.
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PMID:Immune modulation by altered nutrient metabolism: nutritional control of immune-induced growth depression. 834 56

Vitamin E was tested as an adjuvant in an Escherichia coli (O111:B4) J5 vaccine. Twenty cows were assigned to five groups of 4 cows. Cows in four groups were vaccinated with an E. coli J5 bacterin containing 5 ml of 10(9) boiled cells/ml. Vaccinations were at drying off, 30 d after drying off, and within 48 h after calving. Vaccine adjuvants differed among groups. The four treatment adjuvants were 5 ml of Freund's incomplete adjuvant, 5 ml of vitamin E, 2.5 ml of Freund's plus 2.5 ml of vitamin E, and 5 ml of PBS. Cows in the fifth group were unimmunized controls. A front mammary quarter of each cow was challenged by infusion of 10 micrograms of E. coli J5 lipopolysaccharide approximately 4 wk into lactation. Vitamin E alone enhanced serum IgM titers but had no effect on milk IgM or serum and milk IgG titers. The mixture of Freund's plus vitamin E resulted in peak IgG titers in serum and milk comparable with that of Freund's alone. Persistency of IgG titers in cows immunized with the Freund's plus vitamin E mixture was greater than the persistency of titers for cows immunized with the vaccine containing Freund's alone as the adjuvant. The mixture of Freund's plus vitamin E had a synergistic effect in reducing severity of systemic clinical signs.
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PMID:Vitamin E as an adjuvant in an Escherichia coli J5 vaccine. 844 93

There is controversy regarding the evidence for the production of nitric oxide (NO) by neutrophils (PMNs). The present study investigates NO production, as assessed by the biosynthesis of the end products, nitrite and nitrate, in the pellets and supernatants of rat and mouse peripheral blood neutrophils obtained during endotoxemia and of peritoneal carrageenin-elicited PMNs stimulated in vitro with E. coli lipopolysaccharide (LPS). We also investigated the induction of NO synthase by rat and mouse peritoneal cells. The intraperitoneal (ip) administration of LPS to mice (10 mg/kg) and rats (5 mg/kg) significantly increased plasma nitrate concentration by six and 23-fold, respectively. In vivo pretreatment with L-NGmonomethyl arginine (L-NMMA) significantly inhibited this production. Compared to animals injected with PBS, the cell pellets of blood PMNs obtained from mice, but not rats, 2 or 6 h after LPS administration produced significant amounts of nitrite (14 +/- 3 and 18 +/- 2 nmol/mg protein, respectively). Little or no nitrite was found in the incubating medium. In contrast, 6 h after a carrageenin challenge (700 micrograms) peritoneal neutrophils obtained from rats, but not mice, released high concentrations of nitrite into the supernatant during a 24-h period of incubation (34 +/- 0.8 microM). The nitrite concentration of the pellet of these cells was negligible. In contrast to the lack of increase in the amount of nitrite released into the supernatants, the in vitro stimulation of rat PMNs with LPS (10 micrograms/ml) for 24 h did increase intracellular nitrite concentration (from 0.8 +/- 0.07 to 8 +/- 0.3 nmol/mg protein). In mouse PMNs, LPS treatment caused only a small release of nitrite into the incubation medium (14 +/- 1 microM). There was no significant change in nitrite concentration in the cell pellets. These data suggest that rat and mouse neutrophils differ in their ability to produce nitric oxide following stimulation with endotoxin.
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PMID:Differential production of nitric oxide by endotoxin-stimulated rat and mouse neutrophils. 873 34

As oral administration of insulin reduces the incidence of diabetes in NOD mice, and to achieve a better approximation of oral insulin trials being developed for human studies which will use human insulin, we attempted to determine the preventive efficacy of oral administration of human insulin rather than resorting to the animal insulins used in previous studies. As the strength of prevention obtained by oral insulin has not been adequately demonstrated, we determined whether the protection persisted after the oral treatment was discontinued and whether it was resistant to a diabetogenic injection of cyclophosphamide (CY). We also determined whether the effect of insulin could be increased by oral administration of lipopolysaccharide from Escherichia coli (LPS) or another immunostimulant (glycoprotein extracts from Klebsiella pneumoniae, GEKP) which may be more feasible for human application. Female NOD mice were fed once a week (from 35 to 300 days of age) with insulin, LPS, GEKP, insulin plus LPS, insulin plus GEKP, or PBS. A decreased incidence of diabetes were observed in animals fed human insulin (p < 0.01 incidence of diabetes at 300 days of age: 31% in mice fed with insulin and 65% in those fed PBS). Prevention by insulin was not enhanced by oral LPS or GEKP. Yet unexpectedly, mice fed with LPS alone or GEKP alone displayed decreases in diabetes incidence (p < 0.01). The severity of insulitis was reduced in animals fed insulin, LPS, GEKP or combinations of insulin and either immunostimulant (p < 0.02). Although the oral treatments were stopped at 300 days of age, the incidence of diabetes at 360 days remained lower in mice previously fed insulin, LPS, GEKP or combinations of insulin and either immunostimulant (p < 0.01). In mice previously fed PBS, CY injection (60 days after withdrawal of the oral treatment) led to a final incidence of diabetes of 90% (sum of the incidence during the initial 360 days and the further CY-induced incidence). Previous feedings with insulin, LPS, GEKP or combinations of insulin and either immunostimulant did not protect against CY-induced diabetes since incidences reached the final control incidence. T splenocytes from animals fed insulin, LPS, or GEKP, similarly reduced the capacity of T cells from diabetic mice to transfer the disease (p < 0.01). It is concluded that oral treatment with human insulin to be used in human trials reduces the incidence of diabetes in NOD mice. Equivalent preventive efficacy was obtained through feedings with LPS or GEKP (even though no cumulative efficiency was observed with insulin). The latter results suggest that it would be advisable to evaluate the efficiency of oral bacterial antigens for the prevention of human Type 1 diabetes. The protection afforded by oral treatments with insulin or bacterial antigens may be attributed to cellular suppression, persists for some time after treatments are stopped, but is not resistant to major immune stimulation such as injection of CY.
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PMID:Prevention of diabetes in the nonobese diabetic mouse by oral immunological treatments. Comparative efficiency of human insulin and two bacterial antigens, lipopolysacharide from Escherichia coli and glycoprotein extract from Klebsiella pneumoniae. 889 96

In this study, PGE2 levels in lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-challenged human whole blood and TxB2 levels following blood coagulation were measured as biochemical index for cyclooxygenase (Cox)-2 and Cox-1 activity respectively. Incubation of human mononuclear cells isolated from whole blood with LPS (100 mu g/mL) induced a time-dependent increase in the expression of Cox-2 protein (>100 fold at 24 hr). This is associated with increases in PGE2 production and free arachidonate release in the plasma. Cox-1 protein was detected in the human mononuclear cells at time zero but was not induced by either LPS or PBS. Most non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) are more potent at inhibiting Cox-1 than Cox-2. Five experimental compounds CGP-28238, Dup-697, NS-398, SC-58125 and L-745,337, have a greater selectivity for Cox-2. Indomethacin at a single oral dose (25 mg) inhibited approximately 90% the whole blood Cox-2 and Cox-1 activities ex vivo in healthy subjects. These results support the use of this assay to assess the biochemical efficacy of selective Cox-2 inhibitors in clinical trials.
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PMID:A human whole blood assay for clinical evaluation of biochemical efficacy of cyclooxygenase inhibitors. 890 87

Actinobacillus pleuropneumoniae is the causative agent of porcine pleuropneumonia. The major adhesin of A. pleuropneumoniae has previously been identified as a lipopolysaccharide (LPS), and more recently, we demonstrated that high molecular mass LPS were involved in A. pleuropneumoniae adherence to porcine respiratory tract cells. We postulated that immunization with a LPS-based vaccine may confer a protective immunity. The high molecular mass O-polysaccharides obtained after acid hydrolysis and chromatographic separation were conjugated to bovine serum albumin (BSA) as a protein carrier. Groups of mice were injected twice with the following antigen preparations: whole-cell preparation, outer membrane preparation, O-polysaccharide-BSA conjugate, hydrolyzed LPS and phenol/water extracted LPS. A combination of different adjuvants was also used during these immunization procedures to induce a stronger immunological response to the polysaccharide antigen. Two weeks after the second injection, the mice were challenged intranasally with either homologous A. pleuropneumoniae serotype 1 strain or a serotype 5 strain. The highest survival rate, up to 80%, compared to the control groups (P < 0.05), was recorded when the mice were injected twice with 15 micrograms of carbohydrates of O-polysaccharide-BSA conjugate mixed with the saponin-derived adjuvant Quil A. Survival rates of between 60 and 70%, twice those observed in the control groups immunized with PBS, were recorded in mice injected with the O-polysaccharide-BSA conjugate mixed with other adjuvant preparations such as alhydrogel, peanut oil and Freund's incomplete adjuvant. However, the protection induced by the conjugate antigen preparation was serotype specific, because mice challenged with a serotype 5 strain were killed. Taken together, these results confirm the important role of A. pleuropneumoniae LPS in pathogenesis.
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PMID:Evaluation of protective efficacy of an Actinobacillus pleuropneumoniae serotype 1 lipopolysaccharide-protein conjugate in mice. 902 43

The concentration of interleukin-6 (IL-6), alpha1-acid glycoprotein (alpha1-AG), and corticosterone (CORT) was investigated chronologically (0 h to 14 d) in the sera of 2-wk-old specific-pathogen-free chicks inoculated with Escherichia coli lipopolysaccharide (LPS). In the LPS group the IL-6 level was elevated from 1 h to 2 d and was the highest at 3 h. From 4 to 14 d the IL-6 level was low in the LPS group. In the PBS group, IL-6 was not detected except a mild increase from 1 h to 6 h. In the LPS group, the alpha1-AG level increased from 6 h to 4 d, and the peak was 2 d. In the PBS group the alpha1-AG level was always low. The CORT level in the LPS group was higher than that of PBS group at 1 h. This study suggests that E. coli LPS may elevate serum IL-6 and CORT, and that IL-6 and CORT may increase the alpha1-AG level in the chicks.
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PMID:Serum levels of interleukin-6, alpha1-acid glycoprotein, and corticosterone in two-week-old chickens inoculated with Escherichia coli lipopolysaccharide. 962 44

Curcumin is a naturally occurring, dietary polyphenolic phytochemical that is under preclinical trial evaluation for cancer preventive drug development and whose working pharmacological actions include anti-inflammation. With respect to inflammation, in vitro, it inhibits the activation of free radical-activated transcription factors, such as nuclear factor kappaB (NFkappaB) and AP-1, and reduces the production of pro-inflammatory cytokines such as tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF alpha), interleukin-1beta (IL-1beta), and interleukin-8. Inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) is an inflammation-induced enzyme that catalyzes the production of nitric oxide (NO), a molecule that may lead to carcinogenesis. Here, we report that in ex vivo cultured BALB/c mouse peritoneal macrophages, 1-20 microM of curcumin reduced the production of iNOS mRNA in a concentration-dependent manner. Furthermore, we demonstrated that, in vivo, two oral treatments of 0.5 mL of a 10-microM solution of curcumin (92 ng/g of body weight) reduced iNOS mRNA expression in the livers of lipopolysaccharide(LPS)-injected mice by 50-70%. Although many hold that curcumin needs to be given at dosages that are unattainable through diet to produce an in vivo effect, we were able to obtain potency at nanomoles per gram of body weight. This efficacy is associated with two modifications in our preparation and feeding regimen: 1) an aqueous solution of curcumin was prepared by initially dissolving the compound in 0.5 N NaOH and then immediately diluting it in PBS; and 2) mice were fed curcumin at dusk after fasting. Inhibition was not observed in mice that were fed ad lib., suggesting that food intake may interfere with the absorption of curcumin.
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PMID:In vivo inhibition of nitric oxide synthase gene expression by curcumin, a cancer preventive natural product with anti-inflammatory properties. 971 15

As inhaled nitric oxide (iNO) may differently increase bleeding time (BT) and inhibit platelet aggregation in normal and lung-injured patients or experimental models, we studied the effects of iNO on hemostasis in presence and absence of an endotoxic lung injury in the rat. Eight hours after intratracheal administration of endotoxin (lipopolysaccharide [LPS]) or its solvent (phosphate-buffered solution [PBS]), four groups of rats were randomized according to the presence or absence of 15 ppm iNO added for an additional 10 h. We measured BT, ex vivo platelet aggregation, plasma fibrinogen, euglobulin clot lysis time (ECLT), and platelet and aortic cyclic guanosine 5'-monophosphate (cGMP) contents. Acute lung inflammation did not influence BT, but increased platelet aggregability, fibrinogen levels, and platelet and aortic cGMP. In control and endotoxic rats, iNO increased BT, reduced platelet aggregability, and increased platelet cGMP. iNO increased aortic cGMP only in healthy rats. ECLT was increased by LPS and unchanged with iNO. These results suggest that the extrapulmonary "systemic" effects induced by iNO on hemostasis were not strictly similar in healthy and LPS rats, inflammation inducing proper changes in coagulation parameters. However, iNO attenuated the procoagulant activity induced by acute lung inflammation, suggesting a potentially beneficial effect of this therapy.
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PMID:Impact of inhaled nitric oxide on platelet aggregation and fibrinolysis in rats with endotoxic lung injury. Role of cyclic guanosine 5'-monophosphate. 973 Oct 13

Biosensor technology was employed to study the specific interactions of different lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-binding proteins and peptides with LPS, using an LPS-coated surface. Two methods to immobilize biotinylated LPS to streptavidin-coated sensor chips (SA-chips) were evaluated. Biotinylated LPS in PBS or biotinylated LPS, pretreated with EDTA and sodium-desoxycholate, were injected across an SA-chip, resulting in a 'high-' and 'low- mass' LPS chip, respectively. While the 'high mass' LPS chip appeared to be unstable, the 'low mass' LPS chip resulted in reproducible binding curves for bactericidal/permeability-increasing protein (rBPI21) with a binding affinity corresponding to the literature (Kd: 3.75 nM). New Kd values were obtained for serum amyloid P component (SAP, Kd: 3.9 nM), a recently discovered new LPS-binding protein, and cationic protein 18 (CAP18, Kd: 0.58 nM). Moreover, binding affinities of bioactive BPI- and SAP-derived peptides could be determined. This study shows for the first time the applicability of biosensor technology to study interactions of proteins and peptides with LPS, using an LPS-coated sensor chip.
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PMID:Affinities of different proteins and peptides for lipopolysaccharide as determined by biosensor technology. 982 58


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