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1.
Khan O  Headley M  Gerard A  Wei W  Liu L  Krummel MF 《PloS one》2011,6(11):e26138
The priming of immune T cells by their interaction with dendritic cells (DCs) in lymph nodes (LN), one of the early events in productive adaptive immune responses, occurs on a scaffold of lymphoid stromal cells, which have largely been seen as support cells or sources of chemokines and homeostatic growth factors. Here we show that murine fibroblastic reticular cells (FRCs), isolated from LN of B6 mice, play a more direct role in the immune response by sensing and modulating T cell activation through their upregulation of inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) in response to early T cell IFNγ production. Stromal iNOS, which only functions in very close proximity, attenuates responses to inflammatory DC immunization but not to other priming regimens and preferentially affects Th1 cells rather than Th2. The resultant nitric oxide production does not affect T cell-DC coupling or initial calcium signaling, but restricts homotypic T cell clustering, cell cycle progression, and proliferation. Stromal feedback inhibition thus provides basal attenuation of T cell responses, particularly those characterized by strong local inflammatory cues.  相似文献   

2.
Environmental factors, such as viral infection, have been implicated as potential triggering events leading to the initial destruction of pancreatic beta cells during the development of autoimmune diabetes. Double-stranded RNA (dsRNA), the active component of a viral infection that stimulates antiviral responses in infected cells, has been shown in combination with interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma) to stimulate inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) expression and nitric oxide production and to inhibit beta cell function. Interferon regulatory factor-1 (IRF-1), the activation of which is induced by dsRNA, viral infection, and IFN-gamma, regulates the expression of many antiviral proteins, including PKR, type I IFN, and iNOS. In this study, we show that IRF-1 is not required for dsRNA + IFN-gamma-stimulated iNOS expression and nitric oxide production by mouse islets. In contrast to islets, dsRNA + IFN-gamma fails to induce iNOS expression or nitric oxide production by macrophages isolated from IRF-1(-/-) mice; however, dsRNA + IFN-gamma induces similar levels of IL-1 release by macrophages isolated from both IRF-1(-/-) and IRF-1(+/+) mice. Importantly, we show that dsRNA- or dsRNA + IFN-gamma-stimulated IRF-1 expression by mouse islets and peritoneal macrophages is independent of PKR. These results indicate that IRF-1 is required for dsRNA + IFN-gamma-induced iNOS expression and nitric oxide production by mouse peritoneal macrophages but not by mouse islets. These findings suggest that dsRNA + IFN-gamma stimulates iNOS expression by two distinct PKR-independent mechanisms; one that is IRF-1-dependent in macrophages and another that is IRF-1-independent in islets.  相似文献   

3.
Pro-inflammatory cytokines are implicated as the main mediators of beta-cell death during type 1 diabetes but the exact mechanisms remain unknown. This study examined the effects of interleukin-1beta (IL-1beta), interferon-gamma (IFNgamma) and tumour necrosis factor alpha (TNFalpha) on a rat insulinoma cell line (RIN-r) in order to identify the core mechanism of cytokine-induced beta-cell death. Treatment of cells with a combination of IL-1beta and IFNgamma (IL-1beta/IFNgamma)induced apoptotic cell death. TNFalpha neither induced beta-cell death nor did it potentiate the effects of IL-1beta, IFNgamma or IL-1beta/IFNgamma . The cytotoxic effect of IL-1beta/IFNgamma was associated with the expression of inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) and production of nitric oxide. Adenoviral-mediated expression of iNOS (AdiNOS) alone was sufficient to induce caspase activity and apoptosis. The broad range caspase inhibitor, Boc-D-fmk, blocked IL-1beta/IFNgamma -induced caspase activity, but not nitric oxide production nor cell death. However, pre-treatment with L-NIO, a NOS inhibitor, prevented nitric oxide production, caspase activity and reduced apoptosis. IL-1beta/IFNgamma -induced apoptosis was accompanied by loss of mitochondrial membrane potential, release of cytochrome c and cleavage of pro-caspase-9, -7 and -3. Transduction of cells with Ad-Bcl-X(L) blocked both iNOS and cytokine-mediated mitochondrial changes and subsequent apoptosis, downstream of nitric oxide. We conclude that cytokine-induced nitric oxide production is both essential and sufficient for caspase activation and beta-cell death, and have identified Bcl-X(L) as a potential target to combat beta-cell apoptosis.  相似文献   

4.
Apoptotic cells induce immunosuppression through unknown mechanisms. To identify the underlying molecular mediators, we examined how apoptotic cells induce immunoregulation by dendritic cells (DC). We found that administration of DC exposed to apoptotic cells (DC(ap)) strongly inhibited the expansion of lymphocytes in draining lymph nodes in vivo and the subsequent Ag-specific activation of these lymphocytes ex vivo. Unexpectedly, DC(ap) supported T cell activation to a similar extent as normal DC in vitro, leading to proliferation and IL-2 production, except that DC(ap) did not support T cell production of IFN-gamma. Surprisingly, when DC(ap) were cocultured with normal DC, they completely lost their ability to support T cell activation, an effect reversed by anti-IFN-gamma or inhibitors of inducible NO synthase (iNOS). As expected, exposure to apoptotic cells rendered DC(ap) capable of producing much more NO in response to exogenous IFN-gamma than normal DC. Furthermore, DC(ap) from iNOS(-/-) or IFN-gammaR1(-/-) mice were not inhibitory in vitro or in vivo. Therefore, the IFN-gamma-induced production of NO by apoptotic cell-sensitized DC plays a key role in apoptotic cell-mediated immunosuppression.  相似文献   

5.
The existence of an inducible mitochondrial nitric oxide synthase has been recently related to the nitrosative/oxidative damage and mitochondrial dysfunction that occurs during endotoxemia. Melatonin inhibits both inducible nitric oxide synthase and inducible mitochondrial nitric oxide synthase activities, a finding related to the antiseptic properties of the indoleamine. Hence, we examined the changes in inducible nitric oxide synthase/inducible mitochondrial nitric oxide synthase expression and activity, bioenergetics and oxidative stress in heart mitochondria following cecal ligation and puncture-induced sepsis in wild-type (iNOS(+/+)) and inducible nitric oxide synthase-deficient (iNOS(-/-)) mice. We also evaluated whether melatonin reduces the expression of inducible nitric oxide synthase/inducible mitochondrial nitric oxide synthase, and whether this inhibition improves mitochondrial function in this experimental paradigm. The results show that cecal ligation and puncture induced an increase of inducible mitochondrial nitric oxide synthase in iNOS(+/+) mice that was accompanied by oxidative stress, respiratory chain impairment, and reduced ATP production, although the ATPase activity remained unchanged. Real-time PCR analysis showed that induction of inducible nitric oxide synthase during sepsis was related to the increase of inducible mitochondrial nitric oxide synthase activity, as both inducible nitric oxide synthase and inducible mitochondrial nitric oxide synthase were absent in iNOS(-/-) mice. The induction of inducible mitochondrial nitric oxide synthase was associated with mitochondrial dysfunction, because heart mitochondria from iNOS(-/-) mice were unaffected during sepsis. Melatonin treatment blunted sepsis-induced inducible nitric oxide synthase/inducible mitochondrial nitric oxide synthase isoforms, prevented the impairment of mitochondrial homeostasis under sepsis, and restored ATP production. These properties of melatonin should be considered in clinical sepsis.  相似文献   

6.
BACKGROUND: Overproduction of nitric oxide by the inducible form of nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) has been implicated in colitis. Different authors have postulated both toxic and protective effects of nitric oxide (NO) in the pathophysiology of active inflammation. The objective of this study was to examine the role of iNOS in experimental chronic colitis using iNOS-deficient mice. METHODS: For induction of colitis, mice received three cycles of 2% of dextran sodium sulfate (DSS) (M.W. 40,000) treatment in drinking water. The degree of colonic inflammation, leukocyte infiltration, and the expression of cell adhesion molecules were determined. INOS expression and nitrotyrosine were also determined by immunohistochemistry. RESULTS: After DSS treatment, a moderate colitis with marked cell infiltration was observed. Intense expression of iNOS was observed on infiltrating cells as well as on the colonic mucosal epithelium in these animals. In the iNOS-deficient mice, tissue damage was significantly diminished. No iNOS or nitrotyrosine staining was found in iNOS-deficient mice. The number of infiltrating cells and the expression of mucosal adressin cell adhesion molecule-1 were significantly attenuated in the DSS-treated colon of iNOS-deficient mice. CONCLUSION: Induction of iNOS seems to act as a critical toxic effector molecule in the pathogenesis of chronic colonic inflammation.  相似文献   

7.
The lymph node vasculature is essential to immune function, but mechanisms regulating lymph node vascular maintenance and growth are not well understood. Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) is an important mediator of lymph node endothelial cell proliferation in stimulated lymph nodes. It is expressed basally in lymph nodes and up-regulated upon lymph node stimulation, but the identity of VEGF-expressing cells in lymph nodes is not known. We show that, at homeostasis, fibroblast-type reticular stromal cells (FRC) in the T zone and medullary cords are the principal VEGF-expressing cells in lymph nodes and that VEGF plays a role in maintaining endothelial cell proliferation, although peripheral node addressin (PNAd)(+) endothelial cells are less sensitive than PNAd(-) endothelial cells to VEGF blockade. Lymphotoxin beta receptor (LTbetaR) blockade reduces homeostatic VEGF levels and endothelial cell proliferation, and LTbetaR stimulation of murine fibroblast-type cells up-regulates VEGF expression, suggesting that LTbetaR signals on FRC regulate lymph node VEGF levels and, thereby, lymph node endothelial cell proliferation. At the initiation of immune responses, FRC remain the principal VEGF mRNA-expressing cells in lymph nodes, suggesting that FRC may play an important role in regulating vascular growth in stimulated nodes. In stimulated nodes, VEGF regulates the proliferation and expansion of both PNAd(+) and PNAd(-) endothelial cells. Taken together, these data suggest a role for FRC as paracrine regulators of lymph node endothelial cells and suggest that modulation of FRC VEGF expression may be a means to regulate lymph node vascularity and, potentially, immune function.  相似文献   

8.
9.
We assessed the in vitro toxicity of various particles on three murine macrophage cell lines, (J774A.1, WR19M.1, RAW264.7). The cells were exposed to aqueous suspensions (0-100 microg/30 mm2 well) of urban particulate matter (SRM-1648, SRM-1649, EHC-93), fine particulate matter (PM2.5), titanium dioxide (SRM-154b), and respirable cristobalite (SRM-1879) for 2 h and were then stimulated with lipopolysaccharide (LPS, 100 ng/ml) and recombinant interferon-gamma (IFN, 100 U/ml). After overnight incubation with the particles and LPS/IFN, nitric oxide production was estimated from culture supernatant nitrite. Cell viability was determined by monitoring the rate of AlamarBlue reduction. The dose-effect relationships for nitrite and viability were modeled as a power function (Fold change = [Dose+1]beta), where beta represents the slope of the dose-response curve. Potency was defined as the rate of change in nitrite production corrected for cell viability (beta(POTENCY) = beta(NITRITE) - beta(VIABILITY)). Overall, the urban particles decreased nitric oxide production (beta(POTENCY) < 0), while exposure of the cells to fine particulate matter or cristobalite increased the production of nitric oxide (beta(POTENCY) > 0). Titanium dioxide (TiO2) was essentially inactive (beta(POTENCY) approximately to 0). The decrease in nitric oxide production seen in cells exposed to the urban particles was directly correlated to a decrease in the expression of inducible nitric oxide (iNOS) as determined by Western blot analysis. The results indicate that particles are modulators of nitric oxide production in murine macrophages and may directly disrupt expression of iNOS during concomitant pathogen exposure. Pathways leading to enhanced NO production causing cell injury, and to decreased NO release resulting in lower bacterial clearance, may both be relevant to the health effects of ambient particles.  相似文献   

10.
In order to validate the use of Crescentia alata (Bignoniaceae) in the traditional medicine of Guatemala as an antiinflammatory remedy, the methanolic (MeOH) extract has been evaluated in vivo for antiinflammatory activity on carrageenin paw edema in rats and in vitro on Escherichia coli lipopolysaccharide- (LPS)-induced nitric oxide (NO) production and inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) expression in J774.A1 macrophage cell line. This extract exerted in vivo a significant anti-inflammatory activity at the highest dose tested. The same extract showed in vitro an inhibitory activity on inducible nitric oxide synthase expression and on NO formation in LPS-primed J774.A1 cells. Subsequent fractionation and analysis of the extract has led to the isolation and characterization as major constituents of two flavonol glycosides: quercetin 3-O-alpha-L-rhamnopyranosyl-(1->6)-beta-D-glucopyranoside (rutin) 1, kaempferol 3-O-alpha-L-rhamnopyranosyl-(1->6)-beta-D-glucopyranoside (kaempferol 3-O-rutinoside) 2, and flavonol aglycone, kaempferol 3. Their structures were elucidated by spectral methods. The bioassay-directed analysis of flavonols 1-3 indicated that kaempferol (3) was the most active compound contained in the MeOH extract because it reduced in vitro both NO production and iNOS expression in LPS-primed J774.A1 cells, whereas rutin (1) and kaempferol 3-O-rutinoside (2) showed no significant activity. The MeOH extract and all of flavonoids tested did not show in vitro significant cytotoxic effect in J774.A1 macrophage cell line.  相似文献   

11.
The roles of endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS), and its putative association with protein kinase B (PKB), and inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) are not well characterized in hypoxic cardiac cells and there is a lack of studies that measure nitric oxide (NO) directly. Objective To measure NO production in cardiomyocytes and cardiac microvascular endothelial cells (CMECs) under baseline and hypoxic conditions and to evaluate the expression, regulation and activation of eNOS, iNOS and PKB. The effect of PI3-K/PKB inhibition on NO production and eNOS expression/activation was also investigated. Methods Adult rat cardiomyocytes and rat CMECs were made hypoxic by cell pelleting and low PO2 incubation. Intracellular NO was measured by FACS analysis of DAF-2/DA fluorescence, and eNOS, iNOS and PKB were evaluated by Western blotting or flow cytometry. Upstream PKB inhibition was achieved with wortmannin. Results (1) NO levels increased in both cell types after exposure to hypoxia. (2) In hypoxic CMECs, eNOS was upregulated and activated, no iNOS expression was observed and PKB was activated. (3) In myocytes, hypoxia did not affect eNOS expression, but increased its activation. Activated PKB also increased during hypoxia. FACS analysis showed increased iNOS in hypoxic myocytes. (4) Wortmannin resulted in decreased hypoxia-induced NO production and reduced activated eNOS levels. Conclusions Cardiomyocytes and CMECs show increased NO production during hypoxia. eNOS seems to be the main NOS isoform involved as source of the increased NO generation, although there may be a role for iNOS and other non-eNOS sources of NO in the hypoxic myocytes. Hypoxia-induced PKB and eNOS activation occurred simultaneously in both cell types, and the PI3-K/PKB pathway was associated with hypoxia-induced NO production via eNOS activation.  相似文献   

12.
The adaptive response of endothelial cells to stress may lead to the upregulation of nitric oxide (NO) production. Herein, we report inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) induction in primary cultures of human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVEC). The enzyme expression was earlier observed in 12-h cultures, reaching maximal levels after 3 days and decreasing when cells become confluent. The time course of NO production by HUVEC paralleled iNOS expression during the whole culture period, indicating that enzyme was functionally active. Conversely, iNOS induction could not be further detected in HUVEC subcultures passed once from cells presenting maximal levels of iNOS expression in the primary culture. Induction of iNOS in HUVEC was not related to lipopolysaccharide contamination, since the enzyme expression was not affected in the presence of polymyxin B added to primary cultures. Further analysis showed that aminoguanidine, a specific iNOS inhibitor, did not affect cell proliferation, suggesting that the NO produced by HUVEC may not be directly related to cell growth. Platelet endothelial cell adhesion molecule-1 expression was upregulated during cell confluence, in contrast to the decrease of iNOS expression and activity. The data suggest that iNOS expression may be a molecular mechanism mediating the adaptive response of endothelial cells to culture environment.  相似文献   

13.
Antimicrobial peptide P18 markedly inhibited the expression of inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS), tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) and interleukin-1 beta (IL-1beta) in lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-stimulated RAW264.7 macrophage cells, whereas magainin 2 did not inhibit these activities. P18 dose-dependently reduced nitric oxide (NO) production by LPS-stimulated RAW 264.7 macrophage cells, with complete inhibition at 20 microg P18 ml(-1). In contrast, P18 had no effect on NO production and the expression of iNOS mRNA and iNOS protein by interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma)-stimulated RAW264.7 cells, suggesting P18 selectively inhibits LPS-stimulated inflammatory responses in macrophages. An LAL assay showed that P18 has strong LPS-neutralizing activity, indicating that P18 inhibits the inflammatory responses in LPS-stimulated macrophages by direct binding to LPS. Collectively, our results indicate that P18 has promising therapeutic potential as a novel anti-inflammatory as well as antimicrobial agent.  相似文献   

14.
15.
During Trypanosoma cruzi infection the trans-sialidase superfamily stimulates the development of a large population of CD4 T lymphocytes that produces IFNgamma. These CD4 T cells fail to proliferate when stimulated in vitro. Why they fail to proliferate remains unclear. Nitric oxide is a critical component of the host immune response against T. cruzi, and to determine if NO inhibits trans-sialidase superfamily-specific proliferative responses, mice were fed either N(G)-nitro-L-arginine methylester (L-NAME), an inhibitor of inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS), or N(G)-nitro-D-arginine methyl ester (D-NAME), an inactive analog of L-NAME. The L-NAME-fed mice had increased parasitemia and mortality compared to the D-NAME-fed mice. Following stimulation with a T. cruzi trans-sialidase superfamily protein, splenocytes from both groups of mice failed to proliferate but continued to make similar amounts of IFNgamma, suggesting that the development of the trans-sialidase superfamily-specific CD4 response was not affected by iNOS inhibition. In addition, IL-2 receptor (IL-2R) expression was increased on T cells isolated from L-NAME-fed mice. These data suggest that during T. cruzi infection NO causes downregulation of IL-2R expression, but does not cause inhibition of trans-sialidase superfamily-specific CD4 T cell proliferation. Rather, the trans-sialidase superfamily proliferation may be inhibited by epitope variation.  相似文献   

16.
Interferon-gamma and lipopolysaccharide (IFN-gamma/LPS) induce expression of inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) protein both in cells in vitro and in the brain in vivo. In cultured cells, excessive production of nitric oxide (NO) induces neuronal cell death. However, it is still unclear whether IFN-gamma and LPS might induce neuronal cell death in vivo. In this study, we examined the neuronal cell death and induction of major histocompatibility complex (MHC) antigens after microinjection of IFN-gamma/LPS into the rat hippocampus. Although microglia appeared morphologically ramified in the normal and vehicle-injected hippocampus, microinjection of IFN-gamma/LPS immediately induced the ameboid type. From days 1-7, iNOS was expressed in ameboid microglia surrounding the site of the microinjection. Terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated dUTP nick-end labeling (TUNEL)-positive cells appeared among the granular neurons of the dentate gyrus on day 3 and peaked about 7 days after microinjection. When the NOS inhibitor N(G)-nitro-L-arginine (L-NA) was intraperitoneally administered prior to the microinjection, the number of TUNEL-positive neurons decreased in a L-NA dose-dependent manner. These results suggest that IFN-gamma/LPS induces delayed neuronal apoptosis in the hippocampus in vivo, and it possibly involves excessive NO production by iNOS. Thus, this animal model may be one of neurodegenerative with extensive inflammatory activation in the hippocampus.  相似文献   

17.
Ren G  Zhang L  Zhao X  Xu G  Zhang Y  Roberts AI  Zhao RC  Shi Y 《Cell Stem Cell》2008,2(2):141-150
Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) can become potently immunosuppressive through unknown mechanisms. We found that the immunosuppressive function of MSCs is elicited by IFNgamma and the concomitant presence of any of three other proinflammatory cytokines, TNFalpha, IL-1alpha, or IL-1beta. These cytokine combinations provoke the expression of high levels of several chemokines and inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) by MSCs. Chemokines drive T cell migration into proximity with MSCs, where T cell responsiveness is suppressed by nitric oxide (NO). This cytokine-induced immunosuppression was absent in MSCs derived from iNOS(-/-) or IFNgammaR1(-/-) mice. Blockade of chemokine receptors also abolished the immunosuppression. Administration of wild-type MSCs, but not IFNgammaR1(-/-) or iNOS(-/-) MSCs, prevented graft-versus-host disease in mice, an effect reversed by anti-IFNgamma or iNOS inhibitors. Wild-type MSCs also inhibited delayed-type hypersensitivity, while iNOS(-/-) MSCs aggravated it. Therefore, proinflammatory cytokines are required to induce immunosuppression by MSCs through the concerted action of chemokines and NO.  相似文献   

18.
Inhibition of T-cell responses in tumor microenvironments by myeloid-derived suppressor cells (MDSCs) is widely accepted. We demonstrated augmentation of monocytic MDSCs whose suppression of not only T-cell, but also B-cell, responsiveness paralleled the immunodeficiency during LP-BM5 retrovirus infection. MDSCs inhibited T cells by inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS)/nitric oxide (NO), but uniquely, inhibition of B cells was ∼50% dependent each on iNOS/NO and the MDSC-expressed negative-checkpoint regulator VISTA. Blockade with a combination of iNOS/NO and VISTA caused additive or synergistic abrogation of MDSC-mediated suppression of B-cell responsiveness.  相似文献   

19.
Neurogenesis continues in the adult brain and in the adult olfactory epithelium. The cytokine, leukaemia inhibitory factor and nitric oxide are both known to stimulate neuronal progenitor cell proliferation in the olfactory epithelium after injury. Our aim here was to determine whether these observations are independent, specifically, whether leukaemia inhibitory factor triggers neural precursor proliferation via the inducible nitric oxide synthase pathway. We evaluated the effects of leukaemia inhibitory factor on inducible form of nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) expression, and cell proliferation in olfactory epithelial cell cultures and olfactory neurosphere-derived cells. Leukaemia inhibitory factor induced expression of iNOS and increased cell proliferation. An iNOS inhibitor and an anti-leukaemia inhibitory factor receptor blocking antibody inhibited leukaemia inhibitory factor-induced cell proliferation, an effect that was reversed by a NO donor. Altogether, the results strongly suggest that leukaemia inhibitory factor induces iNOS expression, increasing nitric oxide levels, to stimulate proliferation of olfactory neural precursor cells. This finding sheds light on neuronal regeneration occurring after injury of the olfactory epithelium.  相似文献   

20.
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