Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UNIPROT:P43026 (lipopolysaccharide)
62,215 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Endotoxin-induced cells of the reticuloendothelial system were shown to produce mediator(s) that evoke a state of cachexia in recipient animals. The factor(s) responsible were assayed in endotoxin-resistant (C3H/HeJ) mice, which were injected with dialyzed conditioned medium obtained from lipopolysaccharide-induced peritoneal macrophages. The mice exhibited weight loss and anorexia, and they died if sufficient quantities of medium were administered. The syndrome was reversible if injections were discontinued. Endotoxin alone did not produce this effect, and no gross pathologic lesions were discernable in the treated animals. In this model system, cachexia appears to result from the action of soluble macromolecules produced by activated macrophages in vitro. Cachectin (murine tumor necrosis factor) is thought to play a central role in this phenomenon.
...
PMID:Weight loss associated with an endotoxin-induced mediator from peritoneal macrophages: the role of cachectin (tumor necrosis factor). 391 May 66

This study has evaluated the relationship between tumor growth and induction of acute-phase proteins. It has also determined whether an intact cellular immunity is obligatory for a fully expressed acute-phase plasma protein response in the presence of a highly antigenic tumor. Quantitatively, acute-phase responses (protein synthesis, plasma concentrations, hepatic RNA content, anorexia) were proportional to tumor burden. Anti-inflammatory drugs (indomethacin 1 micrograms/g body wt, dexamethasone 0.5 micrograms/g body wt) had no direct effect on the attenuation of the systemic acute-phase responses, but did affect them indirectly by decreasing tumor growth. Immune suppression (cyclosporine A at 20 or 60 micrograms/g body wt) had no effect on either acute-phase reactions or local tumor growth. In endotoxin-stimulated (lipopolysaccharide) normal mice, immune suppression aggravated anorexia and caused high mortality, while dexamethasone partly reversed these effects in endotoxin-stimulated mice. Plasma levels of acute-phase proteins correlated to circulating levels of IL-6 in untreated tumor-bearing mice, but this relationship was not obvious in either drug-treated tumor-bearing or endotoxin-stimulated mice. Tumor tissue induced the synthesis of different acute-phase proteins compared to endotoxin. However, disintegrated normal liver tissue induced the synthesis of serum amyloid protein to the same extent as the growing tumor. This effect was primarily associated with the mitochondrial/lysosomal and microsomal liver cell fractions. In conclusion, the overall acute-phase protein response is not a modulating factor of tumor growth.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Acute-phase proteins in response to tumor growth. 750 21

The cascade of physiologic mechanisms in response to infection, the acute-phase response, is recognized as playing a major role in host defence. One such response is the hypoferremia that is consistently reported to occur during bacterial infection. This study aimed to determine whether the alterations in plasma iron were conditionable using the conditioned taste aversion (CTA) paradigm. The regime involved the pairing of a novel-tasting saccharin solution with bacterial endotoxin. Seven days after the initial pairing of these stimuli (the test day), the saccharin solution was represented. Animals exposed to this condition displayed a significant reduction in the level of plasma iron. Animals treated with an intraperitoneal dose of 400 micrograms/Kg lipopolysaccharide (LPS) displayed lower conditioned iron levels than rats infused with 100 micrograms/Kg LPS; however, this difference was not significant. These results showed that in addition to other acute-phase responses (fever and anorexia), plasma iron alterations are able to be manipulated through behavioral manipulations.
...
PMID:Behavioral conditioning of endotoxin-induced plasma iron alterations. 761 18

One manifestation of the acute phase response, sickness behavior, is now considered an important response in the organism's overall attempt to reinstate homeostasis. This report aimed to determine whether the sickness behavior of anorexia was conditionable using the conditioned taste aversion paradigm. To investigate this phenomenon, lipopolysaccharide (LPS) (100 micrograms/kg) was used as the unconditioned stimulus, and was paired with a novel 1% saccharin solution (conditioned stimulus). Upon conditioned stimulus representation, the anorectic effects of LPS were observed. These data are consistent with recent literature showing acute phase events to be conditionable.
...
PMID:Behavioral conditioning of lipopolysaccharide-induced anorexia. 771 24

The action of endotoxin lipopolysaccharide (LPS) on hepatic Zn uptake was examined in mice lacking expression of metallothionein (MT)-1 and MT-II genes. Hepatic Zn concentrations, which in normal control mice increased by a mean 29% (MT elevated 20-fold) 16 h post-LPS exposure, did not increase in MT-null mice. Plasma Zn fell by 68% in controls and 32% in MT-null mice. The time course of LPS action in normal mice was characterized by a rapid reduction (-74% at 4 h, -81% at 8 h) and partial recovery (-39% at 24 h) in plasma Zn, with a progressive increase over 24 h in hepatic concentrations of MT (by 36-fold) and Zn (by 40%). In contrast, the MT-null mice had a linear decrease in plasma Zn (-15% at 8 h, -41% at 24 h) and early loss of Zn from the liver. The Zn changes seen in MT-null mice were largely attributable to LPS-associated anorexia. Food deprivation (20 h) alone caused respective 14% and 30% decreases in hepatic and plasma Zn concentrations and a 27% reduction in total liver Zn reserves, whereas fasted normal mice conserved Zn with a 4-fold increase in hepatic MT. This study confirms that MT synthesis is essential for endotoxin-induced liver Zn accumulation.
...
PMID:Endotoxin-induced inflammation does not cause hepatic zinc accumulation in mice lacking metallothionein gene expression. 777 39

Systemic and localized inflammation elicit a number of host responses which include fever, cachexia, hypoglycemia, and major changes in the concentration of liver plasma proteins. Interleukin 6 (IL-6) is considered an important mediator of the inflammatory response, together with IL-1 and tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha). The purpose of this study was to unequivocally determine the role of IL-6 in these phenomena making use of IL-6-deficient mice that we have recently generated by gene targeting. We report here that in the absence of IL-6, mice are unable to mount a normal inflammatory response to localized tissue damage generated by turpentine injection. The induction of acute phase proteins is dramatically reduced, mice do not lose body weight and only suffer from mild anorexia and hypoglycemia. In contrast, when systemic inflammation is elicited through the injection of bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS), these parameters are altered to the same extent both in wild-type and IL-6-deficient mice, demonstrating that under these conditions IL-6 function is dispensable. Moreover, we show that LPS-treated IL-6-deficient mice produce three times more TNF-alpha than wild-type controls, suggesting that increased TNF-alpha production might be one of the compensatory mechanisms through which a normal response to LPS is achieved in the absence of IL-6. We also show that corticosterone is normally induced in IL-6-deficient mice, demonstrating that IL-6 is not required for the activation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis. Our results reinforce the idea that different patterns of cytokines are involved in systemic and localized tissue damage, and identify IL-6 as an essential mediator of the inflammatory response to localized inflammation.
...
PMID:Defective inflammatory response in interleukin 6-deficient mice. 793 Oct 61

Microsporidia cause opportunistic infections in AIDS patients and commonly infect laboratory animals, as well. Euthymic C57B1/6 mice experimentally infected with intraperitoneal injections of 1 x 10(6) Encephalitozoon cuniculi Levaditi, Nicolau et Schoen, 1923, Encephalitozoon hellem Didier et al., 1991, or Nosema corneum Shadduck et al., 1990 displayed no clinical signs of disease. Athymic mice, however, developed ascites and died 8-16 days after inoculation with N. corneum, 21-25 days after inoculation with E. cuniculi, and 34-37 days after inoculation with E. hellem. All athymic mice displayed hepatomegaly, dilated intestine and accumulation of ascites fluid. Granulomatous lesions are primarily located in the liver, lung, pancreas, spleen, and on serosal surfaces of abdominal organs. The murine microsporidiosis model also was used to examine immune response that inhibit microsporidia growth in vitro. Recombinant murine interferon-gamma (mIFN-gamma, 100 mu/ml) alone or in combination with lipopolysaccharide (LPS; 10 ng/ml) could activate thioglycollate-induced peritoneal murine macrophages to destroy E. cuniculi. The production of the nitrogen intermediate, NO2-, correlated with parasite destruction. Inhibition of NO2- generation by addition of the L-arginine analogue, NG-monomethyl L-arginine (NMMA), inhibited microsporidia killing, as well. Since microsporidiosis is becoming an important opportunistic infection in AIDS patients, a microsporidiosis model is being developed using SIV/DeltaB670-infected rhesus macaque monkeys (Macaca mulatta). SIV-infected immunocompetent monkeys given E. cuniculi or E. hellem per os developed specific antibodies, and microsporidia could be detected sporadically by calcofluor or antibody fluorescence staining of stool and urine sediment smears. As immunodeficiency progressed, monkeys developed diarrhoea, cachexia, and anorexia, and organisms were detected in urine and stool with greater frequency. Immunodeficient SIV-infected monkeys died approximately 27 days after receiving E. hellem by intravenous inoculation, and approximately 110 days after receiving E. hellem per os. Lesions typical for SIV-infection were observed in both groups of monkeys and microsporidia were detected in kidney and liver of the intravenously-injected monkeys. The murine microsporidiosis model provides an efficient means for studying protective immune responses to microsporidiosis, and may prove useful for screening immunological and chemotherapeutic agents. The pathogenesis of Encephalitozoon microsporidiosis in SIV-infected monkeys appears to parallel encephalitozoonosis in AIDS patients, suggesting that simian microsporidiosis may provide a useful model for evaluating diagnostic methods and therapeutic strategies during various stages of progressing immunodeficiency.
...
PMID:Experimental microsporidiosis in immunocompetent and immunodeficient mice and monkeys. 805 Jul 48

Many of the behavioral responses following acute bacterial or viral infection are now considered important for maintaining homeostasis during inflammation. In the present study, we extend this concept to pigs (16 crossbred barrows) by demonstrating that lipopolysaccharide (LPS, .5, 5, or 50 micrograms/kg BW) from Escherichia coli injected i.p. reduces feed intake, decreases activity, and elevates body temperature. To determine whether any of these effects could be mediated via a prostaglandin (PG)-dependent mechanism, a second experiment with 16 crossbred barrows was conducted. Barrows were pretreated with indomethacin (IND, 5 mg/kg BW [a cyclooxygenase inhibitor]), and their behavior and body temperature following a challenge i.p. injection of LPS (5 micrograms/kg BW) were assessed. Pretreatment with IND inhibited the anorexia and inactivity caused by LPS, suggesting that the behavioral effects of LPS are dependent on activation of a PG system. Lipopolysaccharide alone, however, did not elevate body temperature in this case; thus, the involvement of PGs in this response was not determined. Collectively, these data indicate that pigs respond to LPS by reducing feed intake, decreasing activity, and becoming febrile. The ability of IND to inhibit behavioral effects of LPS is consistent with the hypothesis that a PG system is involved in mediating sickness behavior. Perhaps, by altering the activity of cyclooxygenase it is possible to enhance or inhibit the behavioral symptoms of sickness in pigs.
...
PMID:Lipopolysaccharide-induced sickness behavior in pigs is inhibited by pretreatment with indomethacin. 815 15

Cachexia and anorexia commonly occur in patients with cystic fibrosis (CF), particularly those with severe pulmonary compromise and heavy tracheobronchial colonization with Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Current understanding of the pathophysiology of cachexia attributes much of the anorexia and weight loss to the effects of the cytokine tumor necrosis factor (TNF), which is secreted by endotoxin-stimulated macrophages. It has further been suggested that TNF may play a role in the pathobiochemistry of CF cachexia, secondary to the localized inflammatory response in the lung or wider systemic activation of cells of the monocyte-macrophage series in response to endotoxin. This study investigates TNF production and gene expression by peripheral blood monocyte-derived macrophages from CF patients, compared with normals (NL). The results indicate that although both cell populations responded dose-dependently to lipopolysaccharide (LPS); CF macrophages, upon stimulation with LPS at concentrations of 1 to 1,000 ng/ml, consistently produced substantially higher amounts of TNF than NL macrophages. At the molecular level, Northern blot analysis also revealed that both macrophage populations expressed TNF mRNA in response to LPS in a dose-dependent manner. However, at the same LPS concentrations, CF macrophage TNF mRNA expression was 2- to 4-fold greater than that of NL macrophages. LPS had no effect in either macrophage population on mRNA for CHO-B, a constitutive probe. To investigate differences between NL and CF macrophage TNF regulation, nuclear run-on/half-life studies as well as studies addressing potential differences in LPS membrane interactions and signal transduction were performed.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Expression and regulation of tumor necrosis factor in macrophages from cystic fibrosis patients. 821 92

The constitutive expression of tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF alpha) mRNA and its induction (60 min later) by peripheral injection of Escherichia coli lipopolysaccharide (2 mg/kg i.p.) was demonstrated by polymerase chain reaction (PCR), in the pituitary and hypothalamus but not in the striatum or hippocampus of the rat. The pattern of TNF alpha mRNA induction is different from that observed for mRNAs of IL-1 alpha and IL-1 beta, IL-1ra and IL-6 respectively. This demonstration of the induction of TNF alpha in the brain may contribute to our understanding of the central effects of TNF alpha in fever and anorexia.
...
PMID:Induction of tumor necrosis factor-alpha mRNA in the brain after peripheral endotoxin treatment: comparison with interleukin-1 family and interleukin-6. 825 3


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>