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1.
The effects of ozone on lung arachidonate metabolism in-vitro were studied in cultured bovine pulmonary endothelial cells exposed for 2 hours to ozone in concentrations up to 1.0 ppm. A concentration-dependent decrease in prostacyclin synthesis was found (90% decrease at the highest ozone level of 1.0 ppm). The inhibition of prostacyclin synthesis was not due to a decreased release of arachidonic acid from membrane lipids. We also examined the hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstrictive response to 10% oxygen inhalation in anesthetized dogs in-vivo after exposure to 1.0 ppm ozone for 1 hour. Pulmonary vascular resistance was significantly increased after ozone exposure, similar to the findings in dogs given indomethacin (15 mg/kg). The percentage change in the hypoxic pulmonary pressor response was similar between the ozone exposure and indomethacin-treated groups, although due to the variance of the pulmonary vascular resistance values during hypoxia the results did not reach statistical significance. These results suggest that ozone inhalation affects pulmonary endothelial arachidonate metabolism in-vivo as well as in-vitro.  相似文献   

2.
Exposure of cultured bovine pulmonary artery endothelial cells to varying levels of hypoxia (10% or 0% O2) for 4 hours resulted in a significant dose-dependent inhibition in endothelial prostacyclin synthesis (51% and 98%, at the 10% and 0% O2 levels respectively, p less than 0.05, compared to 21% O2 exposure values). Release of 3H-arachidonic acid from cellular pools was not altered by hypoxia. Some of the cells were incubated with arachidonic acid (20 microM for 5 min) or PGH2 (4 microM for 2 min) immediately after exposure. Endothelium exposed to 0% O2, but not to 10% O2, produced significantly less prostacyclin after addition of either arachidonic acid (25 +/- 5% of 21% O2 exposure values, n = 6, p less than 0.01) or PGH2 (31 +/- 3% of 21% O2 exposure values, n = 6, p less than 0.05). These results suggest that hypoxia inhibits cyclooxygenase at the 10% O2 level and both cyclooxygenase and prostacyclin synthetase enzymes at the 0% O2 exposure levels. Exposure of aortic endothelial cells resulted in a 44% inhibition of prostacyclin at the 0% exposure level. No significant alteration in prostacyclin production was found in pulmonary vascular smooth muscle cells exposed to hypoxia. These data suggest that the increased prostacyclin production reported in lungs exposed to hypoxia is not due to a direct effect of hypoxia on the main prostacyclin producing cells of the pulmonary circulation.  相似文献   

3.
We have previously demonstrated that a 2H exposure of cultured pulmonary endothelial cells to ozone (0.0-1.0 ppm) in-vitro resulted in a concentration-dependent reduction of endothelial prostacyclin production (90% decrease at the 1.0 ppm level). Ozone-exposed endothelial cells, incubated with 20 uM arachidonate, also demonstrated a significant inhibition of prostacyclin synthesis. To further examine the mechanisms of the inhibition of prostacyclin synthesis, bovine pulmonary endothelial cells were exposed to 1.0 ppm ozone for 2H. A significant decrease in prostacyclin synthesis was found within 5 min of exposure (77 +/- 36% of air-exposed control values, p less than 0.05). Endothelial prostacyclin synthesis returned to baseline levels by 12H after ozone exposure, a time point which was similar to the recovery time of unexposed endothelium treated with 0.5 uM acetylsalicylic acid. Incubation of endothelial cells, previously exposed to 1.0 ppm ozone for 2 hours, with 4 uM PGH2 resulted in restoration of essentially normal prostacyclin synthesis. When endothelial cells were co-incubated with catalase (5 U/ml) during ozone exposure, no inhibition of prostacyclin synthesis was observed. Co-incubation with either heat-inactivated catalase or superoxide dismutase (10 U/ml) did not affect the ozone-induced inhibition of prostacyclin synthesis. These data suggest that H2O2 is a major toxic species produced in endothelial cells during ozone exposure and responsible for the inhibition of endothelial cyclooxygenase activity.  相似文献   

4.
Exposure of cultured bovine pulmonary artery endothelial cells to varying levels of hypoxia (10% or 0% O2) for 4 hours resulted in a significant dose-dependent inhibition in endothelial prostacyclin synthesis (51% and 98%, at the 10% and 0% O2 levels respectively, p <0.05, compared to 21% O2 exposure values). Release of 3H-arachidonic acid from cellular pools was not altered by hypoxia. Some of the cells were incubated with arachidonic acid (20 μM for 5 min) or PGH2 (4 μM for 2 min) immediately after exposure. Endothelium exposed to 0% O2, but not to 10% O2, produced significantly less prostacyclin after addition of either arachidonic acid (25 ± 5% of 21% O2 exposure values, n=6, p <0.01) or PGH2 (31 ± 3% of 21% O2 exposure values, n=6, p <0.05). These results suggest that hypoxia inhibits cyclooxygenase at the 10% O2 level and both cyclooxygenase and prostacyclin synthetase enzymes at the 0% O2 exposure levels. Exposure of aortic endothelial cells resulted in a 44% inhibition of prostacyclin at the 0% exposure level. No significant alteration in prostacyclin production was found in pulmonary vascular smooth muscle cells exposed to hypoxia. These data suggest that the increased prostacyclin production reported in lungs exposed to hypoxia is not due to a direct effect of hypoxia on the main prostacyclin producing cells of the pulmonary circulation.  相似文献   

5.
Summary The development of pulmonary hypertension in a wide variety of human disease states and experimental animal models characterized by chronic alveolar hypoxia is mediated by two pathologic vascular processes, a) vasoconstriction and b) vasoconstruction (structural remodeling). The anatomic changes seen within the pulmonary circulation include a) increased deposition of collagen and elastin in the adventitial layer and b) aberrant pulmonary vascular smooth muscle cell proliferation and maturation in the medial segments. Despite the demonstrated ability of pharmacologic manipulation in the experimental animal to ameliorate both the structural and hemodynamic changes, the actual etiologic mechanisms are only beginning to be explored. Using the cell culture technique of co-cultivation, we have investigated the potential role of bovine pulmonary arterial endothelial cell-derived factors in mediating abnormal bovine smooth muscle cell growth under conditions of reduced oxygen tension. We have demonstrated that these cultured endothelial cells exposed in vitro to reduced levels of atmospheric oxygen concentrations of 5.0% and 2.5% O2 for durations of 24 to 72 h produce and secrete soluble growth factor(s) which stimulate smooth muscle cell proliferation when compared to cells maintained under standard tissue culture oxygen conditions of 95% room air. This growth-stimulatory effect required the concomitant presence of serum factors (0.5% fetal bovine serum), was inhibited by heparin, was distinct from platelet-derived growth factor, and seemed to have a molecular weight greater than 14 000 Da. We conclude that reduced levels of oxygen tension in vitro can selectively induce pulmonary arterial endothelial cells to release mitogen(s) which can stimulate vascular smooth muscle replication. Furthermore, we speculate that this in vitro finding may be of importance as an etiologic mechanism to explain the accelerated smooth muscle cell growth characteristic of hypoxic pulmonary arteriopathy.  相似文献   

6.
We have previously demonstrated that a 2H exposure of cultured pulmonary endothelial cells to ozone (0.0–1.0 ppm) resulted in a concentration-dependent reduction of endothelial prostacyclin production (90% decrease at the 1.0 ppm level). Ozone-exposed endothelial cells, incubated with 20 uM arachidonate, also demonstrated a significant inhibition of prostacyclin synthesis. To further examine the mechanisms of the inhibition of prostacyclin synthesis, bovine pulmonary endothelial cells were exposedto 1.0 ppm ozone for 2H. A significant decease in protacyclin synthesis was found within 5 min of exposure (77 ± 36% of air-exposed control values, p < 0.05). Endothelial prostacyclin synthesis returned to baseline levels by 12H after ozone exposure, a time point which was similar to the recovery time of unexposed endothelium treated with 0.5 uM acetylsalicylic acid. Incubation of endothelial cells, previously exposed to 1.0 ppm ozone for 2 hours, with 4 uM PGH2 resulted in restoration of essentially normal prostacyclin synthesis. When endothelial cells were co-incubated with catalase (5U/ml) during ozone exposure, no inhibition of prostacycline synthesis was observed. Co-incubation with either heat-inactivated catalase or superoxide dismutase (10U/ml) did not affect the ozone-induced inhibition of prostacycline synthesis. These data suggest that H2O2 is a major toxic species produced in endothelial cells during ozone exposure and responsible for the inhibiton of endothelial cyclooxygenase activity.  相似文献   

7.
The effects of gamma irradiation (150-3000 rad) on prostacyclin synthesis (PGI2) and Na+-dependent amino acid uptake (alpha-aminoisobutyric acid, AIB) were assessed in vitro in bovine pulmonary artery endothelial cells grown in plastic culture dishes. A dose-dependent increase in both PGI2 synthesis and AIB was found 24 h after irradiation at exposure levels greater than 600 rad. The increase in PGI2 synthesis [297% of sham-irradiated values at 3000 rad, P less than 0.01] was due to an increase in release of arachidonic acid from plasma membrane stores as well as stimulation of cyclooxygenase and/or prostacyclin synthetase enzymes. The increase in AIB uptake (75% increase at 3000 rad compared to sham-exposure values) correlated with the increased synthesis of PGI2 (r = 0.94). There was also a dose-dependent increase in the number of cells that became detached from the culture dishes during the 24-h period after irradiation. The changes in PGI2 synthesis and AIB uptake induced by gamma irradiation differed if the endothelial cells were grown on cover slips, indicating that the endothelial response to irradiation may be dependent on the interaction between the endothelial cell and its extracellular basement membrane matrix.  相似文献   

8.
We tested the hypothesis that vessel homeostasis is maintained through the cross talk of shear-induced production of prostacyclin and nitric oxide (NO). Confluent human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVEC) were exposed to fluid shear stress at 15 dyn/cm(2) using a cone-plate device, and the concentrations of 6-keto-PGF(1alpha) and NO metabolites (nitrate and nitrite) in the medium were measured with radioimmunoassay and the Greiss method, respectively. Compared with static control, shear stress increased cumulative prostacyclin production by twofold after 90 min of exposure. Inhibition of NO synthase enhanced flow-induced prostacyclin production by twofold without affecting the baseline production. Guanylyl cyclase inhibitor enhanced flow-induced prostacyclin production to the same degree. In contrast, a stable agonist of cGMP attenuated the rapid early phase of flow-dependent prostacyclin production. Shear-induced NO metabolite production was unaffected even after indomethacin inhibited prostacyclin production. We conclude that NO shows an inhibitory effect on prostacyclin production under shear stress and that vessel homeostasis may be maintained through an increase in prostacyclin production when NO synthesis is impaired in endothelial cells.  相似文献   

9.
The present study addressed whether chronic hypoxia is associated with reduced nitric oxide (NO) release due to decreased activation of endothelial NO synthase (eNOS). Primary cultures of endothelial cells from human umbilical veins (HUVECs) were used and exposed to different oxygen levels for 24 h, after which NO release, intracellular calcium, and eNOS activity and phosphorylation were measured after 24 h. Direct measurements using a NO microsensor showed that in contrast to 1-h exposure to 5% and 1% oxygen (acute hypoxia), histamine-evoked (10 microM) NO release from endothelial cells exposed to 5% and 1% oxygen for 24 h (chronic hypoxia) was reduced by, respectively, 58% and 40%. Furthermore, chronic hypoxia also lowered the amount and activity of eNOS enzyme. The decrease in activity could be accounted for by reduced intracellular calcium and altered eNOS phosphorylation. eNOS Ser(1177) and eNOS Thr(495) phosphorylations were reduced and increased, respectively, consistent with lowered enzyme activity. Akt kinase, which can phosphorylate eNOS Ser(1177), was also decreased by hypoxia, regarding both total protein content and the phosphorylated (active) form. Moreover, the protein content of beta- actin, which is known to influence the activity of eNOS, was almost halved by hypoxia, further supporting the fall in eNOS activity. In conclusion, chronic hypoxia in HUVECs reduces histamine-induced NO release as well as eNOS expression and activity. The decreased activity is most likely due to changed eNOS phosphorylation, which is supported by decreases in Akt expression and phosphorylation. By reducing NO, chronic hypoxia may accentuate endothelial dysfunction in cardiovascular disease.  相似文献   

10.
Endotoxin injures bovine pulmonary endothelial cells in culture but the cytotoxicity is unaffected by a host of antiinflammatory drugs. We hypothesized that agents which could decrease intracellular concentrations of toxic metabolites of O2 would prevent endotoxin effects on cultured pulmonary artery endothelial cells. We measured endotoxin-induced release of lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) from and production of prostanoids by cultured bovine pulmonary endothelial cells in the presence and absence of dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) and the xanthine oxidase inhibitor allopurinol. Escherichia coli endotoxin (0.001-10 micrograms/ml) caused a dose-related release of LDH and stimulated production of both prostacyclin [measured as 6-ketoprostaglandin F1 alpha (6-keto-PGF1 alpha)] and prostaglandin E2 (PGE2). Both DMSO and allopurinol decreased endotoxin-induced LDH release; this effect was related to concentration of the drugs (0-2% for DMSO and 0-0.3 mg/ml for allopurinol). Both drugs also prevented endotoxin-induced changes in endothelial morphology. Endotoxin increased intracellular reduction of the redox dye nitro blue tetrazolium, caused intracellular oxidation of 2',7'-dichlorofluorescein diacetate and caused release of conjugated dienes from endothelial cells; both DMSO and allopurinol inhibited those responses. DMSO, but not allopurinol, prevented endotoxin-induced production of prostacyclin and PGE2 by endothelium. Direct injury of pulmonary endothelium by endotoxin is inhibited by two chemically dissimilar drugs which have a common potential for decreasing intracellular concentrations of toxic metabolites of O2; indirect evidence suggests that potential as a mechanism for the protective effects of the drugs.  相似文献   

11.
Endostatin induces acute endothelial nitric oxide and prostacyclin release   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Chronic exposure to endostatin (ES) blocks endothelial cell (EC) proliferation, and migration and induces EC apoptosis thereby inhibiting angiogenesis. Nitric oxide (NO) and prostacyclin (PGI(2)), in contrast, play important roles in promoting angiogenesis. In this study, we examined the acute effects of ES on endothelial NO and PGI(2) production. Unexpectedly, a cGMP reporter cell assay showed that ES-induced acute endothelial NO release in cultured bovine aortic endothelial cells (BAECs). Enzyme immunoassay showed that ES also induced an acute increase in PGI(2) production in BAECs. These results were confirmed by ex vivo vascular ring studies that showed vascular relaxation in response to ES. Immunoblot analysis showed that ES stimulated acute phosphorylation of endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS) at Ser116, Ser617, Ser635, and Ser1179, and dephosphorylation at Thr497 in BAECs, events associated with eNOS activation. Short-term exposure of EC to ES, therefore, unlike long-term exposure which is anti-angiogenic, may be pro-angiogenic.  相似文献   

12.
Bovine pulmonary artery endothelial cells (BPAEC) are extremely sensitive to oxygen, mediated by superoxide production. Ionizing radiation is known to generate superoxide in oxygenated aqueous media; however, at systemic oxygen levels (3%), no oxygen enhancement is observed after irradiation. A number of markers (cell growth, alamarBlue, mitochondrial membrane polarization) for metabolic activity indicate that BPAEC maintained under 20% oxygen grow and metabolize more slowly than cells maintained under 3% oxygen. BPAEC cultured in 20% oxygen grow better when they are transiently transfected with either manganese superoxide dismutase (MnSOD) or copper zinc superoxide dismutase (CuZnSOD) and exhibit improved survival after irradiation (0.5-10 Gy). Furthermore, X irradiation of BPAEC grown in 20% oxygen results in very diffuse colony formation, which is completely ameliorated by either growth in 3% oxygen or overexpression of MnSOD. However, MnSOD overexpression in BPAEC grown in 3% oxygen provides no further radioprotection, as judged by clonogenic survival curves. Radiation does not increase apoptosis in BPAEC but inhibits cell growth and up-regulates p53 and p21 at either 3% or 20% oxygen.  相似文献   

13.
The effects of cyclical expansion and elaxation of the vessel wall on endothelial cell metabolism have been modeled using a uniaxial strain device and cultured endothelial cell monolayers. Also, the effects of stopping and then restarting cyclic strain on metabolite secreation rates were determined. Secretion rates of prostacyclin (PGI(2)), endothelin, tissue plasminogen activator (t-PA), and plasminogen activator inhibitor-type 1 (PaI-1) by endothelial cells were constant over24-h periods The secreation of both PGI(2) and endothelin was enhanced in cells exposed to high physiological levels of cyclical strain (10% at 1Hz) compared with controls, while tPA production was unaltered. These results were true for both human and bovine endothelial cells. Characterization of the response of human endothelial cells to cyclical strain made evaluation of stretch effects on PAl-1 secretion possible. A nearly twofold increase in PAl-1 secretion by cells exposed to arterial levels of strain was observed. Endothelin secretion remained elevated even after strain was stopped for 12 h, while PGl(2) secretion returned to control values upon cessation of cyclic stretch. These results indicate that physiological levels of cyclic mechanical strain ca significantly modulate secretion of vasoactive metabolited form endothelial cells. The changes sen secretion are, in some cases, quite different from those caused by arterial levels of fluid shear stress exposure. (c) 1994 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

14.
A protective effect of butyrate against hyperoxia was found with adult rat pulmonary artery smooth muscle cells. Butyrate (5mM) when added just prior to the hyperoxic exposure (95%) markedly decreased lactate dehydrogenase release from cells during 68 hours of exposure (22% release with butyrate versus 98% without). The uptake and reduction of a tetrazolium compound as another index of cell viability also showed similar improvement with butyrate. Butyrate was associated with a striking increase of catalase to three times the control in the air exposed group while GSH content and the activities of superoxide dismutase and glutathione peroxidase were not significantly changed. In the groups exposed to hyperoxia alone, both enzyme activities were decreased compared to the air exposed controls. When butyrate was present with hyperoxia, the superoxide dismutase was maintained closer to the air exposed control values and the catalase activity remained nearly twice as high as the air exposed control cells. These results suggest that butyrate protects rat pulmonary artery smooth muscle cells from hyperoxia by increasing catalase activity which may help to preserve superoxide dismutase activity. This may be a good model to determine the biological significance of catalase and its interrelationships with other antioxidant systems within the cell.  相似文献   

15.
Extracellular histones are mediators of inflammation, tissue injury and organ dysfunction. Interactions between circulating histones and vascular endothelial cells are key events in histone‐mediated pathologies. Our aim was to investigate the implication of extracellular histones in the production of the major vasoactive compounds released by human endothelial cells (HUVECs), prostanoids and nitric oxide (NO). HUVEC exposed to increasing concentrations of histones (0.001 to 100 μg/ml) for 4 hrs induced prostacyclin (PGI2) production in a dose‐dependent manner and decreased thromboxane A2 (TXA2) release at 100 μg/ml. Extracellular histones raised cyclooxygenase‐2 (COX‐2) and prostacyclin synthase (PGIS) mRNA and protein expression, decreased COX‐1 mRNA levels and did not change thromboxane A2 synthase (TXAS) expression. Moreover, extracellular histones decreased both, eNOS expression and NO production in HUVEC. The impaired NO production was related to COX‐2 activity and superoxide production since was reversed after celecoxib (10 μmol/l) and tempol (100 μmol/l) treatments, respectively. In conclusion, our findings suggest that extracellular histones stimulate the release of endothelial‐dependent mediators through an up‐regulation in COX‐2‐PGIS‐PGI2 pathway which involves a COX‐2‐dependent superoxide production that decreases the activity of eNOS and the NO production. These effects may contribute to the endothelial cell dysfunction observed in histone‐mediated pathologies.  相似文献   

16.
A single infusion of Escherichia coli endotoxin into sheep results in structural evidence of pulmonary endothelial injury, increases in both prostacyclin and prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) in lung lymph, and an increase in pulmonary microvascular permeability. Endotoxin-induced lung endothelial damage can also be induced in vitro, but to date these studies have utilized endothelium from large pulmonary vessels. In the present study, we have grown endothelial cells from peripheral lung vessels of cows and sheep and exposed these microvascular endothelial cells to endotoxin. Controls included lung microvascular endothelium without endotoxin and endothelial cells from bovine and sheep main pulmonary artery with and without addition of endotoxin. We found that endotoxin caused significant increases in release of prostacyclin and PGE2 from both bovine and sheep lung microvascular and pulmonary artery endothelium. Normal bovine and sheep pulmonary artery and bovine lung microvascular endothelium released greater levels of prostacyclin than PGE2 (ng/ng); release of PGE2 from the microvascular cells was greater than from the pulmonary artery endothelium in both species. Exposure of endothelial cells from cow and sheep main pulmonary artery to endotoxin results in endothelial cell retraction and pyknosis, a loss of barrier function, increased release of prostacyclin and PGE2 and eventual cell lysis. In lung microvascular cells, the increases in prostanoids were accompanied by changes in cell shape but occurred in the absence of either detectable alterations in barrier function or cytolysis. Thus, while endotoxin causes alterations to endothelial cells from both large and small pulmonary vessels, the effects are not identical suggesting site specific phenotypic expression of endothelial cells even within a single vessel. To determine whether the response of either the large or small pulmonary vessel endothelial cells in culture mimics most closely the in vivo response of the lung to endotoxin requires further study.  相似文献   

17.
An increased lipid peroxides and a decreased production of prostacyclin have been shown in advanced atherosclerotic lesions and plasma. Our purpose was to determine whether the similar findings could be observed in cultured endothelial cells, and whether antioxidants could protect the cell against peroxide injury. In these experiments we have used bovine aortic endothelial cells in culture to address the issue of hyperlipidemia-induced arterial damage. Results of the present study showed that different concentration of hyperlipidemic sera from atherogenic rabbits induced a time- and dose-dependent alteration in the production of prostacyclin and levels of lipid peroxides in endothelial cells. Endothelial cells incubated with hyperlipidemic serum increased prostacyclin generation significantly during the initial stages and then continuously decreased. When endothelial cells were incubated for 36 h, TXA2 generation was also impaired and at the same time the cellular lipid peroxides content increased. There was a positive correlation between the concentration of hyperlipidemic serum and lipid peroxides and an inverse correlation with prostacyclin synthesis. The medium supplemented with antioxidant selenium or vitamin E showed a significant decrease in lipid peroxides and an increase in prostacyclin synthesis. These results suggest that both hyperlipidemic serum and lipid peroxides injury endothelial cells and inactivate prostacyclin synthetase, resulting in a decrease of prostacyclin production, while antioxidants have a protective effect. We conclude that the increase in lipid peroxides in association with hyperlipidemia results in alteration of prostacyclin synthesis that may play an important role in the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis.  相似文献   

18.
Chronic oxygen exposure in the newborn rat results in lung isoprostane formation, which may contribute to the pulmonary hypertension evident in this animal model. The purpose of this study was to investigate the pulmonary arterial smooth muscle responses to 8-iso-prostaglandin F(2alpha) (8-iso-PGF(2a)) in newborn rats exposed to 60% O2 for 14 days. Because, in the adult rat, 8-iso-PGF(2alpha) may have a relaxant effect, mediated by nitric oxide (NO), we also sought to evaluate the pulmonary arterial NO synthase (NOS) protein content and NO release in the newborn exposed to chronic hyperoxia. Compared with air-exposed control animals, 8-iso-PGF(2a) induced a significantly greater force (P < 0.01) and reduced (P < 0.01) relaxation of precontracted pulmonary arteries in the 60% O2-treated animals. These changes were reproduced in control pulmonary arteries by NOS blockade by using NG-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester. Pulmonary arterial endothelial NOS was unaltered, but the inducible NOS protein content was significantly decreased (P < 0.01) in the experimental group. Pulmonary (P < 0.05) and aortic (P < 0.01) tissue ex vivo NO accumulation was significantly reduced in the 60% O2-treated animals. We speculate that impaired pulmonary vascular tissue NO metabolism after chronic O2 exposure potentiates 8-iso-PGF(2alpha)-induced vasoconstriction in the newborn rat, thus contributing to pulmonary hypertension.  相似文献   

19.
Kinetic analyses were performed to understand the mechanism of hyperoxic induced inhibition of prostacyclin synthesis by human umbilical arteries. Brief exposure of arterial segments to oxygen resulted in over 30% decrease in Vmax of cyclooxygenase in treated vessels. In contrast, cyclooxygenase from hypoxic arterial segments showed approximately a 49% increase in Vmax. There were no significant differences in apparent Km values. These studies suggest that the decreased production of prostacyclin by hyperoxic tissue is due to cyclooxygenase inactivation.  相似文献   

20.
Mechanical forces due to fluid flow and cyclical strain can alter endothelial cell morphology and function, including the release of vasoactive materials endothelin, prostacyclin (PGI2), and tissue plasminogen activator (t-PA). In this study, effects of cyclical strain were modeled by culturing bovine aortic endothelial cells on fibronectin-coated elastic membranes of silicone rubber (Silastic) or poly-etherurethane urea (Mitrathane). After growing to confluence under static conditions of 37 degrees C in humidified air with 5% CO2, cells were strained cyclically at membrane elongations of 5% or 10% for 24 hours at 1 Hz. Controls were maintained under static conditions or were exposed to fluid motions similar to the strained cells but without stretching. Secretion rates were constant throughout experiments in the strain chamber with no initial burst in metabolism associated with the initiation of strain. Secretion rates were not altered by choice of elastic membrane. At a physiological level of 10% cyclical strain, prostacyclin and endothelian secretion rates were increased by 2.5-fold and 1.7-fold, respectively, above stationary controls. Endothelin production demonstrated a dose-dependent response with cyclical strain, while PGI2 appeared to require a threshold strain before an increase in secretion occurred. No significant differences in t-PA levels were seen in cyclically strained cells compared with controls. These results indicate that endothelial cells respond metabolically to cyclical strain and suggest that mechanical strain may modulate secretion of selective vasoactive materials by vascular endothelial cells.  相似文献   

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