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Query: UNIPROT:P43026 (
lipopolysaccharide
)
62,215
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Phase I Coxiella burnetii antigen isolated by phenol extraction from purified suspensions of C. burnetii in phase I is a complex
lipopolysaccharide
(
LPS
) molecule containing substances typical of the bacterial
LPS
. Some endotoxic properties of this C. burnetii
LPS
, namely pyrogenicity and skin epinephrine reaction in rabbits,
hypothermia
in white rats, lethal effect on chicken embryos or on actinomycin-D-treated mice are similar to those of
LPS
isolated from other Gram-negative bacteria.
...
PMID:Characterization of an endotoxic lipopolysaccharide from Coxiella burnetii. 0 71
A lipophilic thermostable
lipopolysaccharide
(
LPS
) complex was isolated by phenol extraction from purified suspensions of the typhus group rickettsiae. The
LPS
complex is antigenic and possesses some endotoxic properties such as toxicity for actinomycin D-treated mice, pyrogenicity for rabbits and guinea pigs, ability to elicit
hypothermia
in white rats and local Schwartzman reaction and active cutaneous anaphylaxis in rabbits.
...
PMID:Some biological properties of an endotoxic lipopolysaccharide from the typhus group rickettsiae. 2 40
Ten clinically intact weaned piglets were experimentally intoxicated by intravenous injection of lipoproteide-free
lipopolysaccharide
endotoxin according to Westphal of E. coli O 127:B8. Severe endotoxin shock with all clinical manifestations of experimental coli-enterotoxaemia was induced in all animals and included circulatory disorder with tachycardia, intermittent pallor and/or cyanosis, symptoms of severe systemic intoxication, neurological symptoms, such as lack of coordination, hindleg staggering, spasm, paresis, paralysis, changes in respiration, such as rise in respiratory frequency and deepened breathing premortal deceleration of respiration and gasping for breath, temperature, variation, including hyperthermia and aggravating
hypothermia
, gastro-intestinal symptoms, such as temporary vomiting and persistent diarrhoea, leucopenia, eosinopenia, variation of haematocrit, edematisation, increased transudation, congestion, and gastro-intestinal shock lesions. Eight animals died. These experiments quite obviously have confirmed that endotoxin shock is the common pathogenetic principle behind all forms of coli-entertoxaemia (i.e, the forms of edematisation, cardiovascular failure, and gastro-intestinal processes.) Lipopolysaccharide endotoxin alone may be responsible for the development of both edemas and neurotoxic symptoms (edema disease) and diarrhoea (gastro-intestinal form of coli-enterotoxaemia). The pathogenetic relevance of additional toxins (neurotoxin and enterotoxin) is discussed under this aspect.
...
PMID:[Experimental studies on the pathogenesis of Coli-enterotoxemia in swine. 4. Effect of lipopolysaccharide endotoxin on weaned piglets following parenteral administration]. 33 9
Mice responded to
lipopolysaccharide
(
LPS
) with a dose-dependent, monophasic
hypothermia
reaching a maximum at 2 h postinjection. Degraded polysaccharide was not active; free lipid A, however, induced a similar pattern of
hypothermia
, indicating that the hypothermic principle of
LPS
was embedded within the lipid A component. The hypothermic response of mice to
LPS
was modified by prior exposure of the host to
LPS
. This altered reactivity was manifested by refractory periods (early and late tolerance), in which animals no longer responded with
hypothermia
, or a hyperreactive phase (hypersensitivity), in which hypothermic responses were greatly augmented upon
LPS
challenge. Thus, tolerance observed 24 h after a single injection of
LPS
(early tolerance) was followed, on further
LPS
challenge, by an enhanced hypothermic responses reaching a maximum on day 4. Further daily exposure of the animals to
LPS
eliminated hyperreactivity and led to the establishment of a late tolerance maximally expressed on day 8. Hyperreactivity could also be evoked on day 4 after a single injection of
LPS
. Mice pretreated with Salmonella S- and R-form
LPS
or free lipid A (Salmonella) demonstrated tolerance and hyperreactivity to both homologous and heterologous challenge. In addition, complete cross-tolerance was observed with S-form
LPS
derived from Shigella. It was concluded that the differential effects of
LPS
on host responses (tolerance and hyperreactivity) were due to lipid A.
...
PMID:Lipid A-induced tolerance and hyperreactivity to hypothermia in mice. 63 75
Sublethal doses of vincristine (VNC) and bacterial
lipopolysaccharide
(
LPS
) administered simultaneously to adult male mice resulted in markedly enhanced mortality. All of 10 strains of Pseudomonas aeruginosa tested, 4 of 7 strains of Bacteroides, and 6 of 10 strains of Listeria monocytogenes were able to substitute for purified
LPS
in enhancing mortality in VNC-treated mice. Inoculation of mice with each of 10 strains of Pseudomonas, each of 7 strains of Bacteroides, and about half of the 10 strains of Listeria tested elicited increased resistance to the lethal action of purified
LPS
. The patterns of responses of mice receiving a lethal combination of 2 mg of
LPS
/kg and 1 mg of VNC/kg resembled those of mice receiving a lethal dose of 10 mg of VNC/kg alone or 15 mg of
LPS
/kg alone with respect to (i) serum glutamic pyruvate transaminase activity, (ii) hematocrit values, and (iii) thrombocytopenia. The patterns of responses of mice receiving a lethal combination of
LPS
and VNC resembled those of mice receiving a lethal dose of
LPS
alone with respect to (i)
hypothermia
, (ii) retention of sulfobromophthalein, (iii) fibrinogen level, (iv) prothrombin activity, (v) blood urea nitrogen levels, and (vi) time of death. These data are consistent with the proposition that the combination of VNC and
LPS
produces a fatal renal failure. Histological studies confirmed that there was extensive renal damage in mice treated with lethal doses of
LPS
alone or a lethal combination of
LPS
and VNC.
...
PMID:Enhanced toxicity for mice of combinations of bacterial lipopolysaccharide and vincristine. 94 80
It has been demonstrated that the ferret (Mustela putorius x Mustela putorius furo) responds to intramuscular injection of Salmonella typhi
lipopolysaccharide
(30 ng/kg-100 micrograms/kg) by biphasic change in the body temperature (Tb): the initial decrease in the latter is followed by hyperthermia. Maximum rise in Tb (1.6 +/- 0.1 degrees C) was observed after the injection of
lipopolysaccharide
in the highest dose. Rabbit leucocytic pyrogen/interleukin-1 (1 ml from 3.5 x 10(7) peritoneal phagocytes, 3 ml/kg) induces a pronounced (1.1 +/- 0.3 degrees C) decrease in Tb. Mechanisms of hypothermic effects of pyrogens are discussed. The described pattern (
hypothermia
-hyperthermia) of Tb response to
lipopolysaccharide
in the ferret presumably reflects the central thermoregulatory process which is the same for different changes in Tb during fever.
...
PMID:[The fever reaction of the polecat Mustela putorius x Mustela putorius furo to a bacterial pyrogen: the hypo- and hyperthermic phases]. 130 17
Triggering of the CD3 molecule by in vivo injection of the hamster anti-murine CD3 monoclonal antibody 145-2C11 in adult BALB/c mice leads to massive although transient T cell activation. High levels of tumour necrosis factor (TNF), interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma), IL-2, IL-3 and IL-6 are released into the circulation 1 to 8 h after a single 10 micrograms 145-2C11 i.v. injection. This release induces an impressive self-limited physical reaction associating
hypothermia
, hypomotility (as assessed by actimetry), diarrhoea, piloerection and even death when high doses (a single dose of greater than 100 micrograms/mouse injection) are administered. In vivo injection of 145-2C11 to other selected mouse strains, namely NZW, CBA/J and C3H/HeJ, induced both different cytokine release patterns and sickness. 145-2C11 induced significant release of TNF and IL-2 in all four strains. At variance, IFN-gamma was only detected in BALB/c mice sera which, in terms of physical reaction (
hypothermia
and hypomotility) were the most affected. Higher and long-lasting circulating IL-3/GM-CSF levels were present in CBA/J sera, correlating with a later recovery. These results underline heterogeneity in the in vivo cell activation pattern among different mouse strains, when triggering T lymphocytes via the CD3/Ti molecule as compared to exclusive targeting of monocyte/macrophages by means of
lipopolysaccharide
.
...
PMID:Inter-mouse strain differences in the in vivo anti-CD3 induced cytokine release. 172 Oct 15
We examined the effects of intravenous (IV) or intracerebro-ventricular (ICV) injection of prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) on the rectal temperature of restrained rats. The IV injection of PGE2 (0.5 mg/kg) caused
hypothermia
in rats with high initial rectal temperatures, but caused an elevation in rectal temperature in those animals whose starting temperatures were low. In contrast, the ICV injection of PGE2 induced fever, regardless of the rectal temperature at the time of injection. We also examined whether temperature changes due to the IV injection of endotoxin (
lipopolysaccharide
, LPS, 10 micrograms/kg) or interleukin-1 beta(IL-1 beta, 0.2 micrograms/kg) were dependent upon the rats' initial rectal temperatures. Rats with low rectal temperatures developed fevers in response to LPS, while animals with high starting temperatures showed
hypothermia
. In contrast, the IV injection of IL-1 beta produced fever regardless of initial rectal temperature. These data suggest that PGE2 acts centrally to cause fever and peripherally to cause
hypothermia
, and that following the injection of LPS, these opposing actions of PGE2 may act together to determine the thermoregulatory response.
...
PMID:The effect of prostaglandin E2 on the body temperature of restrained rats. 194 25
Oral exposure to T-2 Toxin (T-2) in experimental animals results in a syndrome similar to that observed in endotoxemia. Endotoxins are
lipopolysaccharide
, outer-membrane components of gram-negative bacteria which induce acute, inflammatory responses. In the present study, several aspects of endotoxin pathophysiology were investigated in mice following simultaneous exposure to T-2 and endotoxin, including mortality,
hypothermia
, tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) and corticosterone production, and thymic weight. The disposition of endotoxin was also assessed, Acute, simultaneous exposure to T-2 (4 mg/kg, po) and endotoxin (3 micrograms/mouse, ip) resulted in increased mortality,
hypothermia
, TNF-alpha production, and thymic atrophy compared to treatment with either T-2 of endotoxin alone. Pretreatment of mice with endotoxin, a regime that renders the animals resistant to the effects of endotoxin, reduced many endotoxin effects in animals treated simultaneously with T-2 and endotoxin. Upon further investigation, it was observed that T-2 increased the absorption rate of endotoxin: as the peak height of serum endotoxin increased, the time-to-peak decreased, and the area under the curve was unchanged in animals treated simultaneously with T-2 and endotoxin. It was concluded that increased endotoxin absorption accounted for the increases in mortality,
hypothermia
, and TNF-alpha associated with T-2 exposure.
...
PMID:Increased endotoxin sensitivity following T-2 toxin treatment is associated with increased absorption of endotoxin. 203 49
The purpose of these studies was to test whether pentoxifylline, a drug that can inhibit the production and action of cytokines hypothesized to be endogenous pyrogens (for example, interleukin 1 and tumor necrosis factor [TNF]), is antipyretic. We also tested the effects of pentoxifylline on plasma activities of interleukin 6 (IL 6) and TNF in response to an injection of a fever-inducing dose of
lipopolysaccharide
(
LPS
). Our results showed that a high dose of pentoxifylline (200 mg/kg) caused
hypothermia
in control rats and blocked
LPS
fever, while a low dose (50 mg/kg) did not have these effects. Injection of the high dose of pentoxifylline in control rats caused a rise in plasma IL 6 but not in plasma TNF. However, the peak levels of plasma IL 6 and TNF activities following an injection of
LPS
were significantly reduced by pretreatment with pentoxifylline. Overall, the data are consistent with the hypothesis that pentoxifylline is an antipyretic drug, which may act at least in part by inhibiting the secretion of pyrogenic cytokines.
...
PMID:The effects of pentoxifylline on lipopolysaccharide (LPS) fever, plasma interleukin 6 (IL 6), and tumor necrosis factor (TNF) in the rat. 210 30
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