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Query: UNIPROT:P43026 (
lipopolysaccharide
)
62,215
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Cell-free
hemoglobin
(Hb) is being developed as an erythrocyte substitute. We have previously demonstrated that cell-free Hb is an endotoxin-binding protein which disaggregates endotoxin and subsequently increases the biological activity of endotoxin in several in vitro assays. Because much of the morbidity and mortality associated with gram-negative bacterial infection is the result of pathophysiologic responses to bacterial
lipopolysaccharide
(LPS; endotoxin), we studied the effect of Hb on LPS-mediated mortality. Hb infused intravenously into mice before, coincident with, or after intraperitoneal LPS injection substantially increased LPS-related mortality from <5% to 50 to 70% 24 h after administration of LPS and from 50% to 60 to 90% at 48 h. Enhanced mortality was observed over a range of doses of injected LPS. At a given LPS dose, enhancement of mortality was shown to be dependent on the dose of Hb administered. Unmodified native human Hb, alpha-alpha-cross-linked human Hb, and beta-beta-cross-linked human or bovine Hb all were shown to enhance LPS-mediated mortality. Depressed reticuloendothelial cell function may have contributed to the enhanced mortality from LPS in the presence of Hb. Therefore, Hb-based blood substitutes, which are currently undergoing clinical trials, may intensify the potentially fatal effects of the sepsis syndrome in patients with trauma, infection, or hypotension who receive Hb for erythrocyte replacement.
...
PMID:Hemoglobin increases mortality from bacterial endotoxin. 911 60
Recent evidence suggests that nitric oxide (NO) generated in vivo will be converted into the forms of nitrite/nitrate, nitrosyl hemoproteins, nitrosyl metal complexes, and S-nitroso-compounds in the circulation. Nitrosothiols have also been reported to be relatively stable metabolites with micromolar levels in plasma. We hypothesized, therefore, that the determinations of all the NO-related compounds in blood would be of diagnostic significance. The assay method described here consists of the thermolysis of all the NO-related compounds in whole blood and the detection of resulting nitrate by fluorometry or chemiluminescence after an enzymatic reduction. S-Nitroso-albumin and nitrosyl
hemoglobin
can be easily thermolysed to nitrate, and relatively stable S-nitroso-glutathione is also degraded to nitrate in the presence of blood constituents with high molecular mass (above 30 kDa). Concentrations of NO-related compounds in blood from healthy human as well as control or
lipopolysaccharide
-stimulated rats were determined. We found that membrane-bound NO which showed the augmented levels under the pathophysiological states could also be detected. Together with electron spin resonance spectra, our data indicate that the fraction of NO diffused and metabolized within red cells and the other NO-metabolites in plasma such as nitrite/nitrate and S-nitroso-compounds, both of which can reflect NO-production in vivo, would be recovered and detected quantitatively by this method.
...
PMID:An assay method for nitric oxide-related compounds in whole blood. 917 7
To evaluate the role of nitric oxide (NO) in hepatic microcirculation and liver injury during endotoxemia, we studied O2 transport in the hepatic microcirculation of endotoxin-infused rats. Rats were continuously infused with Escherichia coli
lipopolysaccharide
(
LPS
) (0.8 mg/kg/h) for 7 hours.
LPS
increased the plasma levels of NO2- + NO3- and aspartate transaminase (AST), and decreased the bile flow rate and hepatic adenosine triphosphate (ATP) level. Hepatic microcirculation was evaluated by two methods: reflectance spectrophotometry showed a decrease in the oxygenation of
hemoglobin
(Hb) in the liver, and dual-spot microspectroscopy indicated that
LPS
administration decreased blood velocity, the oxygenation of Hb, and O2 release from sinusoids to hepatocytes. The observed decreases in the O2 transport parameters were prominent in pericentral sinusoids. All of these phenomena were further aggravated by the administration of N(w)-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME) (5 mg/kg/h) plus
LPS
, and by aminoguanidine (AMG) (5 mg/kg/h) plus
LPS
, and these could be reversed by the concomitant administration of L-arginine (L-Arg) (100 mg/kg/h). These results suggest that deterioration of hepatic oxygen transport and liver function induced by endotoxin can be ameliorated by NO.
...
PMID:Role of nitric oxide in oxygen transport in rat liver sinusoids during endotoxemia. 925 43
We evaluated the potency of truncated secretory leukoprotease inhibitor (truncated SLPI) in a human sputum elastase (HSE)-induced lung injury model and in a specific neutrophil-mediated acute lung injury model in hamsters. Intratracheal administration of HSE induced acute lung hemorrhage that could be measured by determination of the
hemoglobin
content in the bronchoalveolar lavage fluid. Intratracheal administration of truncated SLPI 1 hr before HSE administration inhibited acute lung hemorrhage in a dose-dependent manner (ED50 = 46.8 microg/kg), as did i.v. injection of the inhibitor given 2 min before HSE administration (ED50 = 14.7 mg/kg). Intratracheal administration of endotoxin (
lipopolysaccharide
) induced pulmonary neutrophilia. Twenty-four hours after
lipopolysaccharide
administration, the addition of formyl-methionyl-leucyl-phenylalanine resulted in a neutrophil-dependent acute lung injury that expressed an increase in
hemoglobin
content and in elastase-like activity in bronchoalveolar lavage fluids. In this model, lung injury was significantly attenuated by i.v. and intratracheal administration of truncated SLPI. These results suggest that truncated SLPI appears to be a good candidate inhibitor for the treatment of destructive lung diseases due to neutrophils.
...
PMID:Potency of truncated secretory leukoprotease inhibitor assessed in acute lung injury models in hamsters. 926 69
The effects of acellular
hemoglobin
-based oxygen carriers in preclinical models of sepsis and endotoxemia have been inconclusive with regard to outcomes reported for survival. In the present study, mice were infused with 1 gm/kg of recombinant human
hemoglobin
, rHb1.1, and the effects on mortality and systemic tumor necrosis factor (TNF) and interleukin-6 (IL-6) levels were determined by using both lethal and sublethal bolus endotoxin challenge. Pretreatment of mice with rHb1.1 and challenge with 20 mg/kg of
lipopolysaccharide
(
LPS
) at an LD100 resulted in a 100% mortality rate by 20 hours, whereas the same mortality rate with the vehicle or 5% albumin groups occurred at 50 hours. Mice challenged with lower
LPS
concentrations of 10 and 2.5 mg/kg, corresponding to LD15 and LD0, respectively, had 100% and 17% mortality rates in the rHb group and 17% and 0% mortality rates in the vehicle-treated animals. These doses of
LPS
resulted in maximal increases in systemic TNF, and there were only modest differences between the rHb and the vehicle groups at
LPS
challenge doses of 2.5 and 20 mg/kg, whereas no difference was observed at the 10 mg/kg concentration. At
LPS
concentrations below 10 microg/kg, the increases in circulating TNF were dose dependent and no differences were observed in serum TNF levels between the rHb1.1 and vehicle groups. In addition, there were generally no differences in IL-6 levels between the experimental groups, although at 10 mg/kg
LPS
, a twofold increase in plasma IL-6 levels over those in the controls was observed in the rHb1.1-treated animals. Infusion of rHb1.1 alone did not induce any increase in circulating IL-6 or TNF. These data demonstrate that endotoxin exacerbation, although apparent, was observed only at the highest doses of
LPS
and that at lower concentrations, there were no differences in the extent of cytokine elevation or in survival rate when rHb1.1-, albumin-, or vehicle-pretreated animals were compared.
...
PMID:Interactions of recombinant hemoglobin (rHb1.1) and endotoxin in vivo: effects on systemic tumor necrosis factor and interleukin-6 levels in lethal and sublethal murine models of endotoxemia. 935 82
The effect of exogenous Fe-citrate complex (Fe doses of 120 and 240 micromol/kg) on nitric oxide (NO) production in vivo has been studied in blood and liver tissue of endotoxin-treated mice. Fe-citrate complex was administered to mice subcutaneously at the same time with intravenous injection of Escherichia coli
lipopolysaccharide
(
LPS
). Iron-dependent decrease in NO2-/NO3- and nitrosyl
hemoglobin
levels in blood of animals was detected at 6 h after
LPS
administration, suggesting systemic attenuation of NO generation. NO production in the liver tissue of
LPS
-treated mice was decreased after Fe administration judging from the amount of mononitrosyl-iron complexes formed in the tissue by diethyldithiocarbamate. The iNOS protein determination in the liver tissue of
LPS
-treated mice demonstrated iron-dependent inhibition of iNOS expression. We have found previously that exogenous iron does not affect systemic NO level when it is given at 6 h after
LPS
injection, i.e. after iNOS expression. This is a first report demonstrating iron-dependent iNOS down-regulation in endotoxin-treated mice.
...
PMID:Iron attenuates nitric oxide level and iNOS expression in endotoxin-treated mice. 953 61
Increased mortality has been observed when HIV-infected patients were treated with pyrimethamine (Pyr) as prophylaxis for toxoplasmic encephalitis, suggesting that Pyr might possess immunosuppressive activity. To analyze this in an animal model, immune function was assessed in BALB/c mice using a battery of in vivo and ex vivo assays and an in vivo model of host resistance to Listeria monocytogenes infection. Treatment for 30 days with 60 mg/kg Pyr decreased circulating white blood cell and lymphocyte counts but not neutrophil, red blood cell, or platelet counts or
hemoglobin
levels. Splenic B cell percentages and
lipopolysaccharide
-induced B cell proliferation decreased significantly after treatment with 60 mg/kg Pyr, as did levels of anti-keyhole limpet hemocyanin (KLH) IgM in serum 7 days after immunization with KLH. Anti-KLH IgG levels 14 days after immunization were not affected. Percentages of splenic T cells and macrophages and T cell proliferation in the presence of concanavalin A or allogeneic cells were not decreased by Pyr treatment. An ex vivo assay of T-cell-mediated cytotoxicity was also unaffected. When host resistance to L. monocytogenes infection was assessed, dramatic increases in mortality were observed in Pyr-treated compared to control mice. Increased numbers of L. monocytogenes organisms were observed in liver and spleen of Pyr-treated mice, compared to controls. The reduction in Listeria resistance, which is T cell mediated, contrasts with the fact that no significant changes in T-cell-mediated immunity were observed. It is possible that Pyr affects parameters of innate immunity, which were not monitored in this study.
...
PMID:Pyrimethamine impairs host resistance to infection with Listeria monocytogenes in BALB/c mice. 957 21
Severe periodontal disease often coexists with severe diabetes mellitus. Diabetes is a risk factor for severe periodontal disease. A model is presented whereby severe periodontal disease increases the severity of diabetes mellitus and complicates metabolic control. We propose that an infection-mediated upregulation cycle of cytokine synthesis and secretion by chronic stimulus from
lipopolysaccharide
(
LPS
) and products of periodontopathic organisms may amplify the magnitude of the advanced glycation end product (AGE)-mediated cytokine response operative in diabetes mellitus. In this model, the combination of these 2 pathways, infection and AGE-mediated cytokine upregulation, helps explain the increase in tissue destruction seen in diabetic periodontitis, and how periodontal infection may complicate the severity of diabetes and the degree of metabolic control, resulting in a 2-way relationship between diabetes mellitus and periodontal disease/infection. This proposed dual pathway of tissue destruction suggests that control of chronic periodontal infection is essential for achieving long-term control of diabetes mellitus. Evidence is presented to support the hypothesis that elimination of periodontal infection by using systemic antibiotics improves metabolic control of diabetes, defined by reduction in glycated
hemoglobin
or reduction in insulin requirements.
...
PMID:Periodontal disease and diabetes mellitus: a two-way relationship. 972 90
A simple dot blot enzyme immunoassay was developed to screen enrichment broth cultures for the presence of Salmonella. This unique system utilizes macroporous polyester cloth (Polymacron) with an inexpensive
hemoglobin
coating to provide a high-affinity adsorbent for
lipopolysaccharide
(
LPS
) antigens in test samples. Bound
LPS
antigens are then detected using a monoclonal antibody conjugate recognizing a core oligosaccharide epitope common to all salmonellae frequently found in foods and related samples. The entire test (not including enrichment culture) could be completed in less than 1 h. The performance of this assay was evaluated in the analysis of enrichment broth cultures from a variety of egg and dairy products, chicken carcasses, animal feeds, and food-processing plant environmental samples for the presence of Salmonella.
...
PMID:Polymacron enzyme immunoassay system for detection of naturally contaminating Salmonella in foods, feeds, and environmental samples. 976 74
To better understand the vascular activity of
hemoglobin
-based (Hb-based) oxygen carriers, the endothelial permeability characteristics of Hb derivatives having various molecular masses were defined by using monolayers of bovine endothelial cells cultured on microporous membranes. The endothelial permeability of unmodified bovine Hb was almost twice that of bovine serum albumin. Intramolecularly cross-linked human Hb showed slightly but significantly reduced permeability as compared with unmodified bovine Hb. Polyethyleneglycol modification or haptoglobin binding to Hb further reduced the permeability. These properties were intensified in conditions in which the endothelial barrier function was reduced by pretreatment with either interleukin-6 (100 ng/mL, 21 hours) or
lipopolysaccharide
(1 microg/mL, 10 hours). In contrast, there was little permeability of liposome-encapsulated Hb, and it was almost unaffected by the pretreatments. These data provide the first information that Hb derivatives with smaller molecular masses show larger transendothelial flux. Because Hb is a potent scavenger of endothelium-derived relaxing factor (EDRF), our observations support the idea that smaller Hb-based acellular oxygen carriers are potent vasoconstrictors as a result of abluminal EDRF scavenging.
...
PMID:Permeability characteristics of hemoglobin derivatives across cultured endothelial cell monolayers. 979 3
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