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1.
In this study, we examined the effects of streptokinase on arachidonic acid release and prostacyclin biosynthesis in cultured bovine pulmonary artery endothelial cells. When intact cells were incubated with streptokinase, a significant stimulatory effect on prostacyclin biosynthetic activity in cells was evident without any cellular damage at all concentrations used (1-10,000 units/ml). Streptokinase also caused a marked release of arachidonic acid. It induced rapid phospholipid hydrolysis, resulting in the release of up to 15% of incorporated [3H]arachidonic acid into the medium. After the addition of streptokinase, degradation of phosphatidylcholine and phosphatidylethanolamine was observed and lysophosphatidylcholine and lysophosphatidylethanolamine were produced. We also observed a transient rise in diacylglycerol after the addition of streptokinase. To test for phospholipase C activity, the release of incorporated [3H]choline, [3H]inositol and [3H]ethanolamine into the culture medium was determined. The level of radioactive inositol showed an increase, but the changes in choline and ethanolamine were comparatively small. An increase in inositol was detectable within 1 min after streptokinase addition and peaked after 15 min. Inositol phosphate and inositol trisphosphate were released, and these releases were suppressed by the addition of neomycin (50 microM). These results suggest that streptokinase stimulates phospholipase A2 and C activity, and that prostacyclin biosynthesis is subsequently increased in cultured endothelial cells.  相似文献   

2.
The effects of estradiol on the arachidonic acid pool and prostacyclin biosynthetic activity in rat aortic smooth muscle cells were studied. Estradiol has no significant effect on the distribution of [14C]arachidonic acid in cells with respect to prostacyclin production assay, the endogenous fatty acid (specifically, arachidonic acid) composition of cellular phospholipid fractions and cellular phospholipase (or/and lipase) activities. However, estradiol significantly stimulates both prostaglandin cyclooxygenase and prostacyclin synthetase activities of cells, and induction of new protein biosynthesis is involved in the effect of estradiol on the stimulation of prostacyclin biosynthetic activity.  相似文献   

3.
We have previously reported that estradiol treatment stimulates prostacyclin production by cultured rat aortic smooth muscle cells, through the stimulation of fatty acid cyclooxygenase and prostacyclin synthetase activities. In order to see whether estradiol stimulates the fatty acid cyclooxygenase activity in platelets, intact rats were treated with estradiol, and thromboxane biosynthesis in platelets and prostacyclin production by aortas were investigated. Estradiol significantly stimulates prostacyclin production by aortas. However, no significant effect on thromboxane biosynthesis in platelets is observed. Our present results support the idea that estradiol would be a protective hormone in atherosclerotic heart disease.  相似文献   

4.
Aggregation of chicken thrombocytes was studied in whole blood using an electronic aggregometer. Serotonin (5-hydroxytryptamine, 5HT), arachidonic acid (AA) and collagen, but not adenosinediphosphate (ADP) induced aggregation. Prostaglandin (PG) endoperoxides were essential for arachidonic acid-induced aggregation, but were not involved in 5HT-induced aggregation, as indicated by inhibitory studies with indomethacin. Similar experiments indicated that biosynthesis of endogenous PG endoperoxides contributed to the aggregation induced by low concentrations of collagen, but was of little importance when high collagen doses were employed. PGE1 and PGE2 could abolish all types of aggregation studied, whereas prostacyclin (PGI2) and PGD2 were without any anti-aggregatory activity at 1 μg/ml. Between 1 and 100 ng/ml PGE1 and PGE2 inhibited arachidonic acid- and 5HT-induced aggregation dose-dependently.The lack of any hemostatic function of PGI2 in chickens was also indicated by the absence of biosynthesis of endogenous PGI2 in chicken aorta. PGI2 was assessed as anti-aggregating activity, released by aortic fragments stirred in rabbit platelet rich plasma. Still, the presence of chicken aortic tissue i chicken whole blood inhibited 5HT-, but not arachidonic acid-induced aggregation. This inhibition was not affected by pretreatment of the aortic fragments with indomethacin or pargyline.  相似文献   

5.
The biosynthesis of prostacyclin in cultured endothelial cells from human umbilical cord vein was inhibited by linoleic acid hydroperoxide at a concentration of 0.1 nmol/ml (in terms of malondialdehyde), while that in cultured smooth muscle cells from rabbit aorta was inhibited only at a higher concentration of the hydroperoxide (5.0 nmol/ml).  相似文献   

6.
Prostacyclin production by the bovine aortic smooth muscle   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
It is well known that cultured aortic smooth muscle cells, the phenotype of which has modulated from contractile to synthetic, are able to release prostacyclin (PGI2). We have studied the release of PGI2 from cultured explants of bovine aortic media, which represent an homogeneous population of smooth muscle cells with a contractile phenotype. These explants released spontaneously huge amounts of PGI2, which was the major eicosanoid produced. PGI2 release was stimulated by serum and by serotonin. This experimental model seems useful to evaluate the contribution of smooth muscle to the biosynthesis of PGI2 by the arterial wall.  相似文献   

7.
Freshly isolated neonatal porcine aortic tissue (smooth muscle with or without endothelium present) produced approximately 30 ng/mg wet tissue of 6-oxo-prostaglandin F1 alpha (the stable hydrolysis product from prostacyclin) and approximately 15 ng/mg of prostaglandin E2, as measured by radioimmunoassay after 24 h incubation in culture medium. Primary cultures of porcine endothelial and smooth muscle cells (isolated by enzymic digestion of aortic tissue) exhibited the same pattern of prostaglandin production, but absolute values were greater than for fresh tissue, particularly in the case of endothelium. Subcultures of endothelium produced smaller amounts of prostaglandins, although the pattern remained similar. In contrast, subcultures of smooth muscle cells produced a greater total amount of prostaglandins than did primary cultures, and the main product was prostaglandin E2. Experiments with [14C] prostaglandin H2 or [14C]arachidonic acid confirmed that aortic tissue, cultured endothelium, and primary cultures or aortic smooth muscle cells synthesized prostacyclin, and demonstrated that subcultured smooth muscle cells enzymically isomerised prostaglandin H2 to prostaglandin E2. Kinetic studies showed that prostaglandin production by cultured vascular cells was transiently increased by subculture or changing the growth medium, and that production per cell declined with increasing cell density. The change in pattern of prostaglandin production during culture was shown to be due to a rapid decline in the rate of prostacyclin production (which apparently began immediately after tissue isolation), together with a more gradual rise in prostaglandin E2 production. These results indicate that the amounts and ratios of prostaglandins produced by vascular endothelial and smooth muscle cells are greatly affected by the conditions used to isolate and culture the cells; vascular cells in vivo may similarly alter their pattern of prostaglandin production in response to local changes in their environment.  相似文献   

8.
In the present investigation, we evaluated the production of prostaglandins by human myometrial smooth muscle cells maintained in monolayer culture in the absence or presence of glucocorticosteroids. In the presence of cortisol (10(-7) M) or dexamethasone (10(-8) M), the rate of production of prostacyclin (PGI2) by these cells was decreased significantly. The glucocorticosteroid-mediated inhibition of prostaglandin production was attenuated when cortisol-21-mesylate (10(-6) M), a glucocorticosteroid antagonist, was present in the culture medium. The rate of conversion of radiolabeled arachidonic acid to radiolabeled prostaglandins as determined by use of sonicates of myometrial cells and optimal assay conditions, however, was not affected significantly by treatment with cortisol or dexamethasone in concentrations sufficient to inhibit prostaglandin formation by more than 80%. These findings are suggestive that glucocorticosteroids act in human myometrial smooth muscle cells in culture to inhibit prostaglandin formation by way of a receptor-mediated process that does not involve inhibition of enzyme activities that are involved in the biosynthesis of prostaglandins, i.e. the conversion of arachidonic acid to prostaglandin.  相似文献   

9.
It is well known that cultured aortic smooth muscle cells, the phenotype of which has modulated from contractile to synthetic, are able to release prostacyclin (PGI2). We have studied the release of PGI2 from cultured explants of bovine aortic media, which represent an homogeneous population of smooth muscle cells with a contractile phenotype. These explants released spontaneously huge amounts of PGI2, which was the major eicosanoid produced. PGI2 release was stimulated by serum and by serotonin. This experimental model seems useful to evaluate the contribution of smooth muscle to the biosynthesis of PGI2 by the arterial wall.  相似文献   

10.
The relation between platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF)-induced smooth muscle cell migration, measured in Boyden chambers, and cellular arachidonic acid cascade was studied by using rat aortic smooth muscle cells. Partially purified PDGF stimulated cell migration significantly at a concentration of 1.33-133.0 micrograms/ml. Treatment of the cells with 10(-4)M of 5,8,11,14-eicosatetraynoic acid, an inhibitor of lipoxygenase and cyclooxygenase, and 10(-4)M of caffeic acid, a specific inhibitor of lipoxygenase, caused a significant suppression of PDGF-induced cell migration. Treatment with indomethacin, an inhibitor of cyclooxygenase, did not affect cell migration. These data indicate the involvement of a lipoxygenase product(s) of arachidonic acid in PDGF-associated smooth muscle cell migration.  相似文献   

11.
Arachidonic acid is the precursor of several potent derivatives that regulate physiological functions in the cardiovascular system. Thromboxane (TXA2) and prostacyclin (PGI2) are synthesized by the cyclooxygenase enzyme. The proaggregatory and vasoconstrictive TXA2 produced by platelets is opposed in vivo by the antiaggregatory and vasodilating activity of PGI2 synthesized by blood vessels. Arachidonic acid is also converted via a 5-lipoxygenase to leukotrienes, the vasoconstrictive components of SRSA. We have shown that this latter pathway is regulated by 15-HETE, a product of the 15-lipoxygenase present in lymphocytes. Confluent cultures of rat aorta smooth muscle cells (RSM) were superfused briefly with [14C]arachidonic acid. The products were isolated and analyzed by thin-layer chromatography-radioautography, high performance liquid chromatography, and gas-liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry. Prostacyclin (PGI2) was identified as the major product both by its biological properties in a platelet aggregation assay and by the mass spectrum of its tetra-trimethylsilylether-methyl ester derivative. Minor quantities of PGE2, PGD2, and PGF2 alpha were also synthesized. Three other compounds with chromatographic properties of mono-hydroxy eicosanoic acids were also formed in major amounts. These were shown to be cyclooxygenase products since their synthesis, together with that of prostacyclin, was blocked by the cyclooxygenase inhibitors aspirin (0.2 mM) and indomethacin (10 microM). Quantities of the hydroxy-eicosanoids were isolated from large scale incubations by silicic acid chromatography. Following methylation and reduction with platinum oxide/H2, the compounds were converted to their trimethylsilylether derivatives and analyzed by gas-liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry. The compounds were identified as 11-hydroxy-5,8,12,14-eicosatetraenoic acid (11-HETE), 15-hydroxy-5,8,11,13-eicosatetraenoic acid (15-HETE), and hydroxy-5,8,10-heptadeca-trienoic acid (HHT) by simultaneous ion monitoring of characteristic ions at M/e ratios of 287, 258, 229 for 11-HETE and 343, 314, 173 for 15-HETE, and by comparison with the mass spectra of authentic samples. Rat smooth muscle cells, prelabeled by 24-hour incubation with [14C]arachidonic acid, released large amounts of prostacyclin together with enhanced amounts of 11- and 15-HETE in response to physiological levels of thrombin (0.5-5 units/ml). These experiments demonstrate that, in addition to the thromboxane antagonist prostacyclin, vascular smooth muscle cells produce significant quantities of the leukotriene inhibitor 15-HETE via the cyclooxygenase pathway in response to physiological stimuli such as thrombin. The release of both prostacyclin and 15-HETE by vascular smooth muscle cells may thus play an important role in vascular homeostasis.  相似文献   

12.
In bovine aortic endothelial cells, phorbol 12-myristate, 13-acetate induced a smaller stimulation of prostacyclin release than ionophore A23187: the combination of both agents was highly synergistic. The responses of the bovine aortic smooth muscle were very different in the 2 preparations studied. In media explants cultured for short periods, neither phorbol 12-myristate, 13-acetate, nor A23187, alone or in combination, were able to increase prostacyclin release, whereas serotonin was an effective stimulus. In cultured smooth muscle cells, outgrown from the explants, phorbol 12-myristate, 13-acetate increased prostacyclin release to the same levels as A23187 or serotonin. It is concluded that increased cytosolic Ca++ level and protein kinase C activity induce a synergistic stimulation of endothelial prostacyclin. On the other hand, the phenotypic modulation of the arterial smooth muscle, from a contractile to a synthetic state, seems to be associated with a profound change in the control of prostacyclin.  相似文献   

13.
Lipid transfer between endothelial and smooth muscle cells in coculture   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
A coculture system was employed to study the interactions between endothelium and vascular smooth muscle cells in arachidonic acid metabolism. Bovine aortic endothelial cells grown on micropore filters impregnated with gelatin and coated with fibronectin are mounted on polystyrene chambers and suspended over confluent smooth muscle cultures. The endothelial basal laminae are oriented toward the underlying smooth muscle, and the two layers are separated by only 1 mm. Each cell layer was assayed individually: apical and basolateral fluid also was collected separately for assay. Fatty acids, including arachidonic acid, are readily transferred between the endothelial and smooth muscle cells in this system. Distribution of the incorporated fatty acids among the lipids of each cell is the same as when the fatty acid is added directly to the culture medium. Arachidonic acid released from endothelial cells is available as a substrate for prostaglandin production by smooth muscle. In addition, fatty acids released from the smooth muscle cells can pass through the endothelium and accumulate in the fluid bathing the endothelial apical surface. These fatty acid interchanges may be involved in cell-cell signaling within the vascular wall, the clearance of lipids from the vascular wall, or the redistribution of arachidonic acid and other polyunsaturated fatty acids between adjacent cell types. Furthermore, the findings suggest that prostaglandin production by smooth muscle cells can occur in response to stimuli that cause arachidonic acid release from endothelial cells.  相似文献   

14.
In bovine aortic endothelial cells, phorbol 12-myristate, 13-acetate induced a smaller stimulation of prostacyclin release than ionophore A23187: the combination of both agents was highly synergistic. The responses of the bovine aortic smooth muscle were very different in the 2 preparations studied. In media explants cultured for short periods, neither phorbol 12-myristate, 13-acetate, nor A23187, alone or in combination, were able to increase prostacyclin release, whereas serotonin was an effective stimulus. In cultured smooth muscle cells, outgrown from the explants, phorbol 12-myristate, 13-acetate increased prostacyclin release to the same levels as A23187 or serotonin. It is concluded that increased cytosolic Ca++ level and protein kinase C activity induce a synergistic stimulation of endothelial prostacyclin. On the other hand, the phenotypic modulation of the arterial smooth muscle, from a contractile to a synthetic state, seems to be associated with a profound change in the control of prostacyclin.  相似文献   

15.
Cultured endothelial cells isolated from bovine carotid aorta produce prostacyclin (prostaglandin I2) and a small amount of prostaglandin E2. The effects of kallikrein (EC 3.4.21.8) on the release of prostacyclin from the cells were studied with the radioimmunoassay technique. Kallikrein stimulated the release of prostacyclin in a dose-dependent manner. The maximal stimulation reached up to 9.2-fold at 0.1 micrograms/ml of kallikrein. The effect was not associated with the activation of the fatty acid cyclooxygenase, but with the stimulation of arachidonic acid release. But kallikrein itself did not have phospholipase activity. On the other hand, at the same doses, kallikrein failed to induce platelet aggregation or enhance platelet aggregation induced by collagen. Our findings suggest that the vasodilator effect of kallikrein is mediated in part by prostacyclin production. Furthermore, we investigated the possibility that the stimulatory effect of kallikrein on prostacyclin production in endothelial cells is associated with kinin formation. Bradykinin and lysylbradykinin (kallidin) also stimulated the release of prostacyclin, but the effects were far less than that of kallikrein. And the stimulation due to the addition of both kallikrein and bradykinin on prostacyclin and arachidonic acid release was not competitive or additive, but synergistic. Moreover, even if fetal calf serum was incubated with kallikrein, bradykinin was not detected at all. When kallikrein was pre-incubated with aporotinin, which is an inactivator of kallikrein, the effect of kallikrein was completely abolished. These findings suggest that the stimulatory effect of kallikrein on the release of prostacyclin from vascular cells is possibly not due to kinin formation, but to other substance(s) produced by this serine proteinase.  相似文献   

16.
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   

17.
Cultured bovine aortic endothelial cells convert arachidonic acid to docosatetraenoic acid and also take up docosatetraenoic acid from the extracellular fluid. After a 24-h incubation with biosynthetically prepared [3H]docosatetraenoic acid, about 20% of the cellular fatty acid radioactivity was converted to arachidonic acid. Furthermore, in pulse-chase experiments, the decrease in phospholipid docosatetraenoic acid content was accompanied by an increase in arachidonic acid, providing additional evidence for retroconversion. These findings suggest that one possible function of docosatetraenoic acid in endothelial cells is to serve as a source of arachidonic acid. The endothelial cells can release docosatetraenoic acid when they are stimulated with ionophore A23187, but they do not form appreciable amounts of eicosanoids from docosatetraenoic acid. Enrichment of the endothelial cells with docosatetraenoic acid reduced their capacity to produce prostacyclin (PGI2) in response to ionophore A23187. This may be related to the fact that docosatetraenoic acid enrichment caused a 40% reduction in the arachidonic acid content of the inositol phosphoglycerides. In addition, less prostacyclin was formed when the enriched cells were incubated with arachidonic acid, suggesting that docosatetraenoic acid also may act as an inhibitor of prostaglandin synthesis in endothelial cells.  相似文献   

18.
D M Xiao  L Levine 《Prostaglandins》1986,32(5):709-718
Recombinant human interleukin-l (rIL-1) alpha and beta, which have 26% homology in their amino acid sequence, stimulated arachidonic acid metabolism by squirrel monkey smooth muscle cells and rat liver cells; their relative effectiveness, however, varied with the two cells. Recombinant IL-1 alpha was 3 times more effective than rIL-1 beta at stimulating arachidonic acid metabolism by the primate smooth muscle cells. Recombinant IL-1 alpha was 3 times less effective than rIL-1 beta when measured by their capacity to synergistically stimulate arachidonic acid metabolism of rat liver cells in the presence of palytoxin and anti-diuretic hormone (ADH). The rIL-1 alpha and rIL-1 beta also stimulated the release of radiolabelled arachidonic acid from the smooth muscle cells prelabelled with [3H]arachidonic acid. The two recombinant IL-1s have different heat stabilities, again when measured by their capacity to stimulate arachidonic acid metabolism; IL-1 alpha was more heat stable than IL-1 beta.  相似文献   

19.
To reveal a potential modulating effect of vasoactive pharmacological agents on the prostanoid production of the venous wall, prostacyclin and thromboxane release from venous tissue slices was studied. Aortic and caval vein samples from 20 rats as well as from 21 cats were studied. Prostacyclin and thromboxane productions were determined by radioimmunoassay as 6-keto-PGF1 alpha and TxB2 released into the incubation medium. Venous tissue produced significantly less prostacyclin per unit weight than arterial tissue in rats (30.7 +/- 4.6 vs. 52.1 +/- 8.2 pg/mg/min), while in cats an opposite situation was found (16.6 +/- 3.2 vs. 7.06 +/- 1.9 pg/mg/min). Thromboxane production of venous tissue was consequently higher than corresponding values for aortic tissue (3.72 +/- 0.46 vs. 1.54 +/- 0.14 in rats and 3.4 +/- 0.6 vs. 1.33 +/- 0.19 in cats, all values in pg/mg/min). Norepinephrine and dopamine significantly increased both the prostacyclin and the thromboxane release from venous tissue, while isoproterenol had no effect. Vasopressin significantly increased thromboxane release and decreased the ratio of prostacyclin vs. thromboxane production (from 10.4 +/- 1.6 to 7.5 +/- 1.6, in acetylsalicylic acid pretreated cats). Angiotensin and thrombin had no significant effects. Bradykinin (0.5 microgram/ml) significantly augmented prostacyclin release from venous tissue (14.4 +/- 2.6 from 10.9 +/- 2.4 pg/mg/min) and decreased thromboxane release (0.65 +/- 0.18 from 1.35 +/- 0.22 pg/mg/min). Methionine-enkephalin (5 micrograms/ml) significantly reduced the thromboxane release from venous tissue slices. The presented material demonstrates that several vasoactive agents modulate the vasoactive prostanoid release of the venous wall. In some cases, the prostacyclin and the thromboxane productions are influenced separately, which in turn will have its impact on smooth muscle activity and thrombocyte aggregation.  相似文献   

20.
Lysed aortic smooth muscle cells, when incubated with [14C] araachidonate, synthesized only one radioactive product, which was identified as 6-keto-PGF. Formation of this product from smooth muscle cell lysates was stimulated when human platelet extracts were added to the system, and further stimulation was observed when imidazole, as selective inhibitor of thromboxane synthesis, was added to this coupled system. These observations indicate that the cyclooxygenase of the smooth muscle cells was rate-limiting, that the prostacyclin synthetase of these cells can utilize endoperoxides produced by platelets, and that blocking of thromboxane synthesis might, under certain conditions, shunt arachionate metabolism toward prostacyclin formation.  相似文献   

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