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Query: UNIPROT:P47989 (
xanthine oxidase
)
8,633
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Endothelial cell ICAM-1 upregulation in response to
TNF-alpha
is mediated in part by reactive oxygen species (ROS) generated by the endothelial membrane-associated NADPH oxidase and occurs maximally after 4 h as the synthesis of new protein is required. However, thrombin-stimulated P-selectin upregulation is bimodal, the first peak occurring within minutes. We hypothesize that this early peak, which results from the release of preformed P-selectin from within Weibel-Palade bodies, is mediated in part by ROS generated from the endothelial membrane-associated
xanthine oxidase
. We found that this rapid expression of P-selectin on the surface of endothelial cells was accompanied by qualitatively parallel increases in ROS generation. Both P-selectin expression and ROS generation were inhibited, dose dependently, by the exogenous administration of disparate cell-permeable antioxidants and also by the inhibition of either of the known membrane-associated ROS-generating enzymes NADPH oxidase or
xanthine oxidase
. This rapid, posttranslational cell signaling response, mediated by ROS generated not only by the classical NADPH oxidase but also by
xanthine oxidase
, may well represent an important physiological trigger of the microvascular inflammatory response.
...
PMID:Rapid upregulation of endothelial P-selectin expression via reactive oxygen species generation. 1238 85
Burn trauma produces significant fluid shifts that, in turn, reduce cardiac output and tissue perfusion. Treatment approaches to major burn injury include administration of crystalloid solutions to correct hypovolemia and to restore peripheral perfusion. While this aggressive postburn volume replacement increases oxygen delivery to previously ischemic tissue, this restoration of oxygen delivery is thought to initiate a series of deleterious events that exacerbate ischemia-related tissue injury. While persistent hypoperfusion after burn trauma would produce cell death, volume resuscitation may exacerbate the tissue injury that occurred during low flow state. It is clear that after burn trauma, tissue adenosine triphosphate (ATP) levels gradually fall, and increased adenosine monophosphate (AMP) is converted to hypoxanthine, providing substrate for
xanthine oxidase
. These complicated reactions produce hydrogen peroxide and superoxide, clearly recognized deleterious free radicals. In addition to
xanthine oxidase
related free radical generation in burn trauma, adherent-activated neutrophils produce additional free radicals. Enhanced free radical production is paralleled by impaired antioxidant mechanisms; as indicated by burn-related decreases in superoxide dismutase, catalase, glutathione, alpha tocopherol, and ascorbic acid levels. Burn related upregulation of inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) may produce peripheral vasodilatation, upregulate the transcription factor nuclear factor kappa B (NF-kappaB), and promote transcription and translation of numerous inflammatory cytokines. NO may also interact with the superoxide radical to yield peroxynitrite, a highly reactive mediator of tissue injury. Free radical mediated cell injury has been supported by postburn increases in systemic and tissue levels of lipid peroxidation products such as conjugated dienes, thiobarbituric acid reaction products, or malondialdehyde (MDA) levels. Antioxidant therapy in burn therapy (ascorbic acid, glutathione, N-acetyl-L-cysteine, or vitamins A, E, and C alone or in combination) have been shown to reduce burn and burn/sepsis mediated mortality, to attenuate changes in cellular energetics, to protect microvascular circulation, reduce tissue lipid peroxidation, improve cardiac output, and to reduce the volume of required fluid resuscitation. Antioxidant vitamin therapy with fluid resuscitation has also been shown to prevent burn related cardiac NF-kappaB nuclear migration, to inhibit cardiomyocyte secretion of
TNF-alpha
, IL-1beta, and IL-6, and to improve cardiac contractile function. These data collectively support the hypothesis that cellular oxidative stress is a critical step in burn-mediated injury, and suggest that antioxidant strategies designed to either inhibit free radical formation or to scavage free radicals may provide organ protection in patients with burn injury.
...
PMID:Free radicals and lipid peroxidation mediated injury in burn trauma: the role of antioxidant therapy. 1282 Dec 84
Severe acute pancreatitis causes a high incidence of mortality due to the systemic inflammatory response syndrome leading to multiple organ failure. At present, there is no treatment against severe acute pancreatitis, other than supportive critical care. The relationship between pancreatic injury and the uncontrolled systemic response is not completely understood. Nevertheless, experimental and clinical evidences have shown that pro-inflammatory cytokines and oxidative stress are critically involved in the development of local and systemic complications associated with severe acute pancreatitis. Serum levels of pro-inflammatory cytokines, such as
TNF-alpha
and IL-1beta, increase during the course of acute pancreatitis and they appear to be the driving force for the initiation and propagation of the systemic response. Accordingly, pretreatment with an antibody against
TNF-alpha
or blockade of
TNF-alpha
production with pentoxifylline ameliorates experimental acute pancreatitis. In addition, serum IL-6 and IL-8 levels appear to be correlated with severity of pancreatic inflammation. The role of oxidative stress in acute pancreatitis has been evidenced indirectly by beneficial effects of antioxidants as well as directly by pancreatic glutathione depletion and increased lipid peroxidation. Furthermore, circulating
xanthine oxidase
released by the damaged pancreas acts as a source of systemic oxidative stress contributing to lung inflammation. In conclusion, pancreatic injury seems to trigger at least two different pathways, i.e. pro-inflammatory cytokines and oxidative stress, both involved in the systemic effects of acute pancreatitis. Elucidation of these mechanisms and their interactions is critical to develop a treatment based on the pathophysiology of acute pancreatitis.
...
PMID:Role of cytokines and oxidative stress in the pathophysiology of acute pancreatitis: therapeutical implications. 1456 Nov 85
Compelling evidence indicates that the small intestine is the primary source of factors inducing lung injury after major surgery and that the lymphatic system is the major route by which these gut-derived factors reach the pulmonary circulation. This study investigated the mechanism of lung edema induced by surgical stress. After subjecting male, fasted, pathogen-free Sprague-Dawley rats to surgical stress (laparotomy and intestinal handling for 5 min), followed by ventilation for 5 h, we measured H2O2 production in the mucosa of small intestine and in the lung using 2',7'-dichlorofluorescein and intravital fluorescence microscopy. In addition, H2O2 in mesenteric lymph was measured using a quantitative assay; lung permeability was assessed as a function of extravasation of Evans blue dye; neutrophil accumulation was visualized by intravital fluorescence microscopy and assessed as a function of myeloperoxidase activity; and
TNF-alpha
levels were measured using a specific ELISA. The intensity of 2',7'-dichlorofluorescein fluorescence in the mucosa of small intestine, H2O2 levels of mesenteric lymph, and lung permeability were all significantly higher in rats subjected to surgical stress than in control animals. Moreover, all of these effects were blocked by pretreatment with a specific
xanthine oxidase
inhibitor. Surgical stress did not increase neutrophil accumulation or
TNF-alpha
production in the lung. In conclusion, surgical stress induces
xanthine oxidase
-dependent H2O2 production in the small intestine. The H2O2 then enters the mesenteric lymph and travels to the lung, where it increases capillary permeability and thus induces edema.
...
PMID:Hydrogen peroxide derived from intestine through the mesenteric lymph induces lung edema after surgical stress. 1475 90
Type 1, or cellular, immune response is characterized by overproduction of
TNF-alpha
, IFN-gamma, IL-1, IL-2 and IL-8 and is the underlying immune mechanism of psoriasis, alopecia areata, rheumatoid arthritis, Crohn's disease, multiple sclerosis, insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus and experimental autoimmune uveitis (EAU). Type 2 immune response is seen in antibody-mediated autoimmune diseases. Based on the pharmacokinetic effects of cetirizine and allopurinol, this paper introduces these two safe and inexpensive drugs as novel potential agents against cell-mediated autoimmune disorders. Cetirizine, supposed to inhibit DNA binding activity of NF-kappa B, inhibits the expression of adhesion molecules on immunocytes and endothelial cells and the production of IL-8 and LTB4, two potent chemoattractants, by immune cells. It induces the release of PGE2, a suppressor of antigen presentation and MHC class II expression, from monocyte/macrophages and reduces the number of tryptase positive mast cells in inflammation sites. Tryptase is a chemoattractant, generates kinins from kininogen, activates mast cells, triggers maturation of dendritic cells and stimulates the release of IL-8 from endothelial cells and the production of Th1 lymphokines by mononuclear immunocytes. Allopurinol is a free radical scavenger, suppresses the production of
TNF-alpha
and downregulates the expression of ICAM-1 and P2X(7) receptors on monocyte/macrophages. ICAM-1 serves as a ligand for LFA-1 (on T lymphocytes), allowing proper antigen presentation. P2X(7) receptors are thought to be involved in IL-1beta release, mitogenic stimulation of T lymphocytes and the probable cytoplasmic communication between macrophages and lymphocytes at inflammation sites. Allopurinol was markedly more effective than prednisolone in treating experimental autoimmune uveitis and in combination with cyclosporine suppressed the inflammatory reaction of this condition more effectively than either agent alone. As allopurinol is a competitive inhibitor of
xanthine oxidase
and decreases serum levels of uric acid, which is protective against multiple sclerosis, it should preferably be coadministered with uric acid precursors in the treatment of this condition. Cetirizine and allopurinol may prove of benefit in the treatment of various cellular autoimmune disorders.
...
PMID:Cetirizine and allopurinol as novel weapons against cellular autoimmune disorders. 1503 12
Transactivation of the DNA-binding proteins nuclear factor-kappa B (NF-kappa B) and activator protein (AP)-1 by de novo oxyradical generation is a stereotypic redox-sensitive process during hypoxic stress of the liver. Systemic trauma is associated with splanchnic hypoxia-reoxygenation (H/R) followed by intraportal gram-negative bacteremia, which collectively have been implicated in posttraumatic liver dysfunction and multiple organ damage. We hypothesized that hypoxic stress of the liver before stimulation by Escherichia coli serotype O55:B5 (EC) amplifies oxyradical-mediated transactivation of NF-kappa B and AP-1 as well as cytokine production compared with noninfectious H/R or gram-negative sepsis without prior hypoxia. Livers from Sprague-Dawley rats underwent perfusion for 180 min with or without 0.5 h of hypoxia (perfusate PO(2), 40 +/- 5 mmHg) followed by reoxygenation and infection with 10(9) EC or 0.9% NaCl infusion. In H/R + EC livers, nuclear translocation of NF-kappa B and AP-1 was unexpectedly reduced in gel shift assays vs. normoxic EC controls, as were perfusate
TNF-alpha
and IL-1 beta levels. Preceding hypoxic stress paradoxically increased postbacteremic reduced-to-oxidized glutathione ratios plus nuclear localization of I kappa B alpha and phospho-I kappa B alpha, but not JunB/FosB profiles. Notably,
xanthine oxidase
inhibition increased transactivation as well as cytokine production in H/R + EC livers. Thus brief hypoxic stress of the liver before intraportal gram-negative bacteremia potently suppresses activation of canonical redox-sensitive transcription factors and production of inflammatory cytokines by mechanisms including
xanthine oxidase
-induced oxyradicals functioning in an anti-inflammatory signaling role. These results suggest a novel multifunctionality of oxyradicals in decoupling hepatic transcriptional activity and cytokine biosynthesis early in the posttraumatic milieu.
...
PMID:Hypoxic suppression of E. coli-induced NF-kappa B and AP-1 transactivation by oxyradical signaling. 1505 91
We have studied the oxidative status of 155 semen samples, 95 originating from healthy individuals and 60 from infertile patients, which were subdivided into two groups: (a) normozoospermic with genitourinary tract infection (GTI); and (b) with pathological spermiogram and GTI. Several phases of infection were observed: with bacterial presence only, bacteria and leukocytes, and leukocytes only, following the routine inflammatory pattern. Leukocyte numbers, bacterial strains, pro- and anti-oxidants, and selected pro-inflammatory cytokines (IL-1 beta, IL-6, IL-8 and
TNF-alpha
) were studied. Additionally, two oxido-sensitive indices were created (SOD/XO and CAT/XO) in order to follow particular phases of semen infection in two subgroups of patients. Different patterns of activities of pro- and anti-oxidant substances, as well as cytokines, were observed in the studied populations. It was reflected mainly by elevated XO activity in a group of patients with a pathological spermiogram while, in a group of patients with GTI and normozoospermia,
xanthine oxidase
was normal. In the latter group, oxido-sensitive indices were elevated in favour of anti-oxidants; similarly, this occurred with IL-6 levels in comparison to healthy controls. It appears therefore that normozoospermic semen recovers better after infection than pathological semen. Perhaps, IL-6 secretion might be helpful in the observed recovery?
...
PMID:Male genital tract infection: an influence of leukocytes and bacteria on semen. 1528 87
Adenosine is a ubiquitous molecule that influences every physiological system studied thus far. In this review, we consider the influence of this purine nucleoside on some of the physiological systems affected during sepsis and SIRS. In the control of perfusion and cardiac output distribution, endogenous adenosine appears to play an important role in regulating perfusion in various vascular beds. Some of this control is mediated by stimulation of adenylyl cyclase, while part occurs by stimulating the production of nitric oxide. In the heart, adenosine may act as an inhibitory modulator of
TNF-alpha
expression. With regard to innate immune responses the effects of adenosine vary considerably, and are complex. However, the dominant responses relevant to SIRS indicate attenuation of inflammatory responses. Many of the effects of adenosine may also involve modulating oxyradical-mediated response. This occurs via increased oxyradical production via adenosine degradation (
xanthine oxidase
pathway), or limiting inflammatory oxyradical generation. Attempts to exploit the beneficial responses to adenosine have met with some success, and are considered here.
...
PMID:Advances in understanding adenosine as a plurisystem modulator in sepsis and the systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS). 1597 May 17
Pro-inflammatory cytokines have been shown to depress myocardial mechanical function by enhancing peroxynitrite generation in the heart. The contribution of NO synthesized by different NOS isoforms, as well as the contribution of superoxide to this mechanism are still not clear. Isolated working hearts of iNOS(-/-) and wildtype mice were perfused for 120 min in the presence or absence of a mixture of pro-inflammatory cytokines (IL-1beta,
TNF-alpha
, and IFN-gamma). iNOS mRNA was detected only in cytokine-treated wildtype hearts. In wildtype hearts, cytokine treatment significantly decreased cardiac work, calculated as cardiac output times peak systolic pressure, to 31+/-9% of original values by the end of perfusion (P <0.05). The decline of cardiac work induced by cytokine treatment was significantly reduced in iNOS(-/-) hearts (63+/-5% of original value). Only cytokine-treated wildtype hearts showed decreased aconitase activity, indicating a higher level of oxidative stress in these hearts. Cytokines increased NADPH oxidase activity in both wildtype and iNOS(-/-) hearts, whereas NADH oxidase and
xanthine oxidase
/xanthine dehydrogenase activities were unaffected. The SOD mimetic MnTE2PyP prevented the cytokine-induced decline of cardiac work in both wildtype and iNOS(-/-) hearts. Cardiac p38 MAPK activation was unaltered in all experimental groups. Although genetic disruption of the iNOS gene provides partial protection against cytokine-induced cardiac dysfunction, iNOS-independent mechanisms, including contribution of NO from other NOS enzymes and the generation of superoxide, are also important contributors.
...
PMID:The involvement of superoxide and iNOS-derived NO in cardiac dysfunction induced by pro-inflammatory cytokines. 1617 9
Clinical responses to some disease agents differ between sexes and this dimorphism has been attributed to the immunomodulating effects of steroid hormones. Our objective was to determine in steers the effect of testosterone on circulating concentrations of immune response mediators (tumor necrosis factor-alpha,
TNF-alpha
; serum amyloid-A, SAA; haptoglobin, HG;
xanthine oxidase
, XO; nitric oxide, NO) after two consecutive endotoxin challenges (LPS1 and LPS2, 5 days apart; 0.25 microg/kg BW). Sixteen crossbred steers (328+/-6 kg) were assigned to control (CON, n=8) or testosterone cypionate treatment (TES, n=8; 100 mg/m2 body surface; i.m. injection 12 and 2 days before LPS1). The response to LPS was calculated as area under the timexconcentration curve (AUC) for the parameter measured. After LPS1,
TNF-alpha
AUC was greater in TES than CON (P<0.05). Plasma HG and SAA concentrations increased (P<0.01) after LPS1 and LPS2. In all steers SAA AUC was greater after LPS1 than LPS2 (P<0.01) but the response was augmented over CON with testosterone treatment (P<0.05). HG response to LPS1 within 24 h was not affected by testosterone. However, 5 days after LPS1 mean plasma HG concentration remained higher in TES than CON (P<0.01). HG response to LPS2 was greater in TES than CON (P<0.01). Plasma nitrate+nitrite concentration (NO production marker) and XO activity increased after each LPS challenge but responses were not affected by testosterone treatment. Results indicate that the presence of circulating testosterone increases the magnitude of the
TNF-alpha
response to LPS challenge as well as the subsequent increases in acute phase proteins (APP). Effects of testosterone on increases in
TNF-alpha
and APP may underlie a differential presentation of disease symptoms between sexes or between steers and bulls. The data also suggest a role for testosterone in the development of tolerance to repeated immune challenge through its effect on the increased magnitude and duration of HG response.
...
PMID:Exogenous testosterone modulates tumor necrosis factor-alpha and acute phase protein responses to repeated endotoxin challenge in steers. 1638 1
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