Publication | Closed Access
Pulmonary alveolar epithelial inducible NO synthase gene expression: regulation by inflammatory mediators
92
Citations
28
References
1995
Year
Inflammatory Lung DiseaseLung InflammationNitric OxideImmunologyPulmonary Alveolar ProteinosisNo Oxidation ProductsRedox BiologyOxidative StressInflammationReactive Nitrogen SpeciePulmonary PharmacologyAllergyPulmonary FibrosisPulmonary MedicineInflammatory MediatorsReactive Oxygen SpecieGene ExpressionCell BiologyPulmonary DiseasePulmonary Vascular DiseaseCytokineAnti-inflammatoryPulmonary Physiology.No Oxidation ProductsMedicineNitrosative Stress
Nitric oxide (.NO) is a short-lived mediator that can be induced by different cytokines and lipopolysaccharide (LPS) in a variety of cell types and produces many physiological and metabolic changes in target cells. In the current study, we show that a combination of cytokines, LPS, and zymosan-activated serum (ZAS; called for convenience cytomix Z) induces production of high concentrations of the NO oxidation products nitrite (NO2-) and nitrate (NO3-) by cultured rat fetal lung epithelial type II cells in a time-dependent fashion. Interferon-gamma and tumor necrosis factor-alpha alone did not significantly affect .NO synthesis, whereas ZAS, LPS, and interleukin-1 beta caused only a modest increase in formation of .NO oxidation products. Production of NO2- and NO3- was inhibited by NG-monomethyl-L-arginine and cyclohexmide. After exposure of these cells to a combination of the above cytokines, Escherichia coli LPS, and ZAS (cytomix Z), enhanced inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) expression was indicated by an elevation in steady-state mRNA specific for iNOS (via Northern blot analysis) and increased immunofluorescence for iNOS after cell permeabilization, incubation with anti-iNOS antibody, and treatment with Cy3.18-conjugated rabbit-specific antibody. The extent of inflammatory mediator-induced.NO production by alveolar epithelium, which exceeds that of other lung cell types, reveals new insight into mechanisms of pulmonary host defense and pathways of free radical-mediated lung injury.
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