Nitric oxide is believed to participate in nonspecific cellular immunity. Gram negative bacterial endotoxins increase the production of reactive nitrogen intermediates (RNI) in phagocytic cells by inducing the enzyme nitric oxide synthase II (NOS II). Anti-inflammatory glucocorticoids attenuate endotoxin-induced increases in RNI. This study evaluated the effect of in vivo administration of prednisolone on Escherichia coli lipopolysaccharide endotoxin (LPS)-induced increases in plasma RNI and neutrophil mRNA for NOS II and production of RNI in the rat. We show that LPS rapidly induces mRNA for NOS II and production of RNI (NO2- and NO3- anion) in rat neutrophils within 2 hr after in vivo administration of a sublethal dose of 0.5 mg/kg, i.v. A pharmacologic dose of prednisolone (50 micrograms/kg, im) given 15 min before LPS-attenuated production of NO2- and NO3- by neutrophils and suppressed LPS-stimulated mRNA for NOS II. 3-Amino, 1,2,4-triazine inhibited NO2- and NO3- production without affecting gene expression for NOS II. These data demonstrate that LPS rapidly induces functional gene expression for NOS II and prednisolone prevents induction of NOS II activity by inhibiting transcription of its mRNA.
Tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) stimulates nitric oxide (NO) in vascular endothelium by induction of the enzyme NO synthase II (NOS II). We examined the effects of TNF-alpha on 1) endothelium-dependent (EDR) and endothelium-independent (EIR) relaxation and 2) contraction of bovine intralobar pulmonary arteries (BPA) and veins (BPV) in vitro. Acetylcholine (ACh), bradykinin (BK), histamine, and A23187 produced EDR of BPA contracted with a 50% effective concentration of U-46619 (15 nM), because relaxation was abolished by endothelium-rubbing and attenuated by L-NG-mono-methylarginine (L-NMMA; 300 microM). TNF-alpha (0.00417, 0.0417, 0.417, and 1.25 micrograms/ml) incubated with BPA for 60 min inhibited EDR of the BPA to ACh, BK, and histamine. The effects of TNF required 30 min for onset. Recovery of EDR occurred 3-4 h after washout of TNF-alpha. Pentoxifylline (1 microM) did not affect ACh-induced EDR but selectively reversed TNF-alpha-mediated inhibition of ACh-induced EDR. TNF-alpha-mediated inhibition of EDR was not reversible by L-NMMA, an inhibitor of NOS I and NOS II, the cyclooxygenase inhibitor ibuprofen, or CV-3908 (1 microM), a platelet-activating factor antagonist. The inhibitory effect of TNF-alpha on EDR was not mediated by nonspecific sensitization of the endothelium to human protein because recombinant human granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (10, 50, and 500 x 10(3) U/ml) did not affect EDR of BPA. The effect of TNF-alpha was specific for release of NO from the endothelium of BPA because TNF-alpha did not affect 1) EDR of BPV to ACh, BK, or ATP; 2) EIR of BPA or BPV to nitroprusside; and 3) contraction of either BPA or BPV to KCl, U-46619, histamine, norepinephrine, or serotonin. Thus TNF-alpha appears to selectively inhibit receptor-mediated EDR and NO release in BPA. TNF-alpha-mediated inhibition of EDR differs from that of L-arginine-based inhibitors and may represent an endogenous physiological mechanism of regulation of NO in the endothelium.
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