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1.
The abilities of a number of compounds of biological interest to protect alpha-1-proteinase inhibitor (alPI) against the loss of elastase inhibitory capacity (EIC) resulting from exposure to gas-phase cigarette smoke have been tested. We have identified several species that protect AlPI. Amino acids prevent the loss of EIC in a manner that correlates with their pK alpha-values; only the unprotonated amine provides protection. Catalase partially prevents the loss of EIC, suggesting that hydrogen peroxide produced from the reduction of oxygen in cigarette smoke extracts is responsible for at least some of the smoke-induced inactivation. The best protection against smoke-induced loss of EIC was provided by two biologically important antioxidant species: glutathione and ascorbic acid. Both species provide almost complete protection to alPI under the experimental conditions used. The nature of species that protect AlPI against the inactivation caused by exposure to gas-phase smoke provides clues upon which speculations about the mechanism of this inactivation may be based. The identification of protective species could lead to the development of compounds that smokers could take (for example, vitamin C) that would protect their lung tissue against the oxidative damage caused by cigarette smoke.  相似文献   

2.
Cigarette smoke was found to be rather ineffective in inactivating alpha 1-proteinase inhibitor (alpha 1-PI) in aqueous solution, whereas a slow inactivation of alpha 1-PI by a dimethyl sulfoxide extract of whole cigarette smoke condensate was observed. However, this inactivation could only partially be prevented by antioxidants indicating that it is not, or at least not exclusively, due to oxidation. The bulk of inactive alpha 1-PI found in lung lavage fluids from smokers is thus probably generated through endogenous mechanisms and not through smoke components directly.  相似文献   

3.
Nitric oxide (NO) aqueous solutions were prepared by saturating pure NO gas and hydrolyzing 1 mM 1-hydroxy-2-oxo-3-(N-methyl-3-aminoethyl)-3-methyl-1-triazene (NOC-7), a NO donor, under anerobic conditions. The modified Saltzman method was employed for standardization of the NO aqueous solutions. NO and NO(2) in the solutions were driven with nitrogen gas stream into the first Saltzman solution to measure NO(2) and the leaked NO was driven with air stream through an oxidizing solution into the second Saltzman solution to measure NO, and NO(-)(2) and NO(-)(3) in the residual solutions were determined directly and after reduction with nitrate reductase, respectively. The concentrations of nitrogen oxide species in the NO solutions were about 1.8 mM NO/0.01 mM NO(2)/0.1 mM NO(-)(2)/0.1 mM NO(-)(3), and unchanged during keeping at 20 degrees C for 1 h under anerobic conditions but became 0.05 mM NO/0.01 mM NO(2)/1.7 mM NO(-)(2)/0.1 mM NO(-)(3) by keeping at 20 degrees C for 10 min under aerobic conditions. Instability of NO under aerobic conditions was supported by consumption of 1/4 equivalent amount of dissolved oxygen, and by loss of ability to convert 2-(4-carboxyphenyl)-4,4,5,5-tetramethylimidazoline-1-oxyl-3-oxide (carboxy-PTIO) to carboxy-PTI. Simultaneous quantification of nitrogen oxide species by the modified Saltzman method was found to be useful for practical standardization of NO aqueous solutions.  相似文献   

4.
Tobacco smoking is the most important extrinsic cause, after the diet, for increasing morbidity and mortality in humans. Unless current tobacco smoking patterns in industrialised and non-industrialised countries change, cigarettes will kill prematurely 10 million people a year by 2025. Greece is at the top of the list of European countries in cigarette consumption. In 1997, a Greek tobacco company introduced a new 'bio-filter' (BF) claiming that it reduces substantially the risks of smoking. In a recent publication [Deliconstantinos G, Villiotou V, Stavrides J. Scavenging effects of hemoglobin and related heme containing compounds on nitric oxide, reactive oxidants and carcinogenic volatile nitrosocompounds of cigarette smoke. A new method for protection against the dangerous cigarette constituents. Anticancer Res 1994; 14: 2717-2726] it was claimed that the new 'bio-filter' (activated carbon impregnated with dry hemoglobin) reduces certain toxic substances and oxidants (like NO, CO, NOx, H2O2, aldehydes, trace elements and nitroso-compounds) in the gas-phase of the mainstream smoke. We have investigated by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) the mainstream and sidestream smoke of the BF cigarette, in comparison with three other cigarettes with similar tar and nicotine contents, that have conventional acetate filters. We found that BF cigarette smoke has similar tar radical species with the same intensity EPR signals to those of the other cigarettes. The ability of the aqueous cigarette tar extracts to produce hydroxyl radicals (HO*), which were spin trapped by DMPO, was very similar to, or even higher than, the other 3 brands. The gas-phase of the mainstream smoke of the BF cigarette showed a 30-35% reduction in the production of oxygen-centered radicals (spin trapped with PBN). In the case of the sidestream smoke, BF cigarettes produced substantially higher concentrations of gas-phase radicals, compared to the other brands. These results suggest that BF is partially effective at removing some of the gas-phase oxidants but not effective in the reduction of tar and its radical species in the mainstream and sidestream smoke. It is well known from epidemiological studies that tar content is strongly associated with increasing risk to smokers of lung cancer. In our experiments, BF cigarettes produce a higher amount of tar and stable free radical species than the other 3 brands in the sidestream smoke (between puffs), thus potentially increasing risk to the smoker and passive smoker.  相似文献   

5.
In the present study we demonstrated that NO synthase and xanthine oxidase of synaptosomes isolated from rabbit brain cortex can be activated by the gas phase of cigarette smoke to produce nitric oxide and superoxide which react together to form peroxynitrite. Expose of synaptosomes, up to 3 hours, in the gas phase of cigarette smoke, a gradual increase in both nitric oxide and superoxide release that were inhibited by N-monomethyl-L-arginine (100 M) and oxypurinol (1 mM), respectively, was observed. NO synthase and xanthine oxidase activities were increased approximately three fold after treatment of synaptosomes with the gas phase of cigarette smoke as compared with the gas phase deprived of oxidants. Synaptosomes treated with the gas phase of cigarette smoke dramatically increased 3-nitrotyrosine production (used as an index of peroxynitrite formation). Synaptosomes treated with the gas phase of cigarette smoke, promptly increased malondialdehyde production with subsequent decrease of synaptosomal plasma membrane fluidity estimated by fluorescence anisotropy of 1,4-(trimethyl-amino-phenyl)-6-phenyl-hexa-1,3,5-triene. Gas phase deprived of oxidants showed a small but not statistically significant (p > 0.05) effect on both malondialdehyde and membrane fluidity. In summary, the present results indicate that activation of NO synthase and xanthine oxidase of brain cells by oxidants contained in the gas phase of cigarette smoke lead to the formation of peroxynitrite a causative factor in neurotoxicity.  相似文献   

6.
Nagai A  Imamura M  Watanabe T  Azuma H 《Life sciences》2008,83(13-14):453-459
In the present experiments, we tried to elucidate whether changes in arginase activity, protein expression of arginase-I and -II, and NO production are involved in accelerating the intimal hyperplasia following administration of cigarette smoke extract (CSE). The intimal hyperplasia was caused by removing endothelial cells with the aid of balloon embolectomy catheter in the right carotid artery of the male rabbit. The left carotid artery underwent sham operation and served as control. CSE was prepared by bubbling a stream of cigarette smoke into phosphate buffered saline. Rabbits were given subcutaneously with CSE once a day for 5 weeks from 1 week before to 4 weeks after the surgery. The specimens were assessed histologically and the intima/media ratio (%) was evaluated as an index of the intimal hyperplasia. The accelerated intimal hyperplasia with CSE was accompanied by the augmentation of the impaired cyclic GMP production, enhanced overall arginase activity and up-regulation of arginase-I. Pearson's correlation coefficient analyses revealed the close relationships among the arginase activities in endothelial cells and smooth muscle layer, the intimal/media ratio and cyclic GMP production. These results suggest that the enhanced arginase activity together with facilitated up-regulation of arginase-I with CSE, which was associated with the augmented impairment of NO production, shed a new light on the processes associated with accelerating the intimal hyperplasia in rabbit carotid arteries following CSE.  相似文献   

7.
Free radicals are detected in the gas-phase smoke resulting from the combustion of wood using the electron spin resonance (ESR) spin trapping method. The materials were pyrolyzed by rapid heating in a quartz tube in a flowing air stream. The filtered smoke was bubbled into a dodecane solution of alpha-phenyl-N-tert-butyl nitrone, and the resulting nitroxide radicals were detected by ESR. The radicals spin trapped from woodsmoke are compared to those we have spin trapped from tobacco smoke; the smoke from both yellow pine and oak produce more intense ESR spectra than does tobacco smoke per unit mass burned under the conditions of these experiments. When woodsmoke is bubbled through pure dodecane and the resulting woodsmoke/dodecane solution is held for a delay time before the PBN is added, radicals are detected even after the woodsmoke/dodecane solution is aged for more than 20 min. Similar experiments with tobacco smoke show that radicals no longer are trapped even after much shorter delay times from tobacco smoke/dodecane solutions.  相似文献   

8.
Epithelial secretory component (SC) is thought to be essential for immunologic protection of the respiratory tract from viral and bacterial infection, since it transports polymeric IgA from the basolateral to the luminal surface of epithelial cells. We have hypothesized that recurrent infection in airways of cigarette smokers is at least partly a consequence of cigarette smoke-induced downregulation of the expression and/or release of SC from airway epithelial cells, subsequently resulting in decreased transcytosis of secretory IgA to the airway lumen. To test this hypothesis, we have cultured human bronchial epithelial cells (HBEC) from surgical tissues and exposed these for 20 minutes to either air or cigarette smoke. Following exposure to cigarette smoke the HBEC cultures were incubated for a further period of up to 24 h, during which time separate cultures were processed by immunocytochemistry for the presence of SC, in a time-dependent manner. The stained HBEC cultures were evaluated by colour image analysis for the percentage of total cells staining for SC. Exposure to cigarette smoke significantly decreased the percentage of total HBEC staining for secretory component from a baseline value (median and interquartile[IQ]1, IQ3) of 35.9% (26.5, 41.6) to 15.7% (8.2, 25.4; p < 0.05) 1 h after exposure, compared with exposure to air. The percentage of cells staining for secretory component were further reduced to 5.3% (3.3, 6.4; p < 0.01), 6 h after exposure, compared to exposure to air. After incubation for 24 h following exposure to cigarette smoke, there was gross cell damage and the cells were not suitable for immunocytochemical analysis. These results suggest that short-term exposure to cigarette smoke may compromise the immune barrier function of the airway mucosa by decreasing the expression and/or release of epithelial SC, thereby decreasing the transcytosis of IgA necessary for inactivating the microbial pathogens in the airway lumen.  相似文献   

9.
By using the ESR spin trapping technique with the N-methyl-D-glucamine dithiocarbamate (MGD)2-Fe(II) complex, the generation of nitric oxide (NO), a gaseous free radical, was observed in NO spin trapping solution bubbled with the filtered main-stream of cigarette smoke. The ESR signal with a three-line spectrum characteristic of an NO radical, which was not observed immediately after bubbling of smoke, started rapidly increasing with time up to around 25 min after the last addition of ferrous ions Fe(II), and then slowly approached a peak value dependent on the burned cigarette mass and on the smoking speed. The production of NO was, however, much affected by air oxidation and enhanced by the addition of ascorbic acid. A certain concentration of sodium nitrite (NaNO2) solution, in which nitrite NO2- is assumed as the main origin of the NO, mimicked closely the time course of NO generation resulting from the smoke of one cigarette. The cigarette smoke that was passed through alkaline pyrogallol solution as a deoxidizer; however, it exhibited an unchanged intensity of NO signal throughout the measurement. These results strongly suggest that NO would be gradually reproduced from NO2- in the reductive aqueous solution containing excess Fe(II) through NO2, which is initially formed and is concomitantly oxidized from NO in cigarette smoke.  相似文献   

10.
This paper describes a method for monitoring short term changes in arterial blood in rabbits in response to a single breath of cigarette smoke. The method was developed to investigate the observation that neutrophil transit times through the lung are extended during acute exposures to cigarette smoke (1). In this model, we sought to monitor the time course of appearance of diffusible gas from smoke to the blood stream, the appearance of lipid peroxidation products and the activation of neutrophils. New Zealand white rabbits were anesthetized and fitted with a tracheostomy tube and an aortic catheter. Smoke was collected in a syringe from a non-filtered cigarette and injected immediately via the tracheostomy tube. Blood samples were collected at 1 second intervals. Carboxyhemoglobin levels increased 108% over pre-smoke levels, peaking at 5-7 seconds after the start of smoke exposure. Serum conjugated dienes, as measured by change in absorbance of lipid extracts at 234 nm, increased 40%, peaking at 10-11 seconds. Thiobarbituric acid (TBA) reactive material exhibited a variable response, with a statistically insignificant maximum at 12 seconds. Serum myeloperoxidase activity was not affected by smoke inhalation. This method provides a model for studying the acute effects of smoke inhalation and provides some evidence for oxidant stress following a single breath of cigarette smoke.  相似文献   

11.
Cigarette smoke contains free radicals both in the particulate matter (tar) and in vapor-phase smoke. Vapor-phase smoke decreases the activity of alpha-1-proteinase inhibitor (alpha 1PI) in vitro. The free radical content of the tar and vapor-phase smoke from a cigarette that heats rather than burns tobacco has been compared with data on a standard 1R4F cigarette. No radicals were detected in the tar from the new cigarette and radicals in its vapor-phase smoke are lower by more than 99% relative to the 1R4F standard cigarettes. The vapor-phase smoke from the new cigarette causes essentially no reduction of alpha 1PI activity in vitro. These findings support our previously published mechanisms for the production of radicals in tar and in vapor-phase smoke.  相似文献   

12.
Reactive oxygen species have been identified as key mediators of leukocyte/endothelial cell interaction under various pathological conditions and diseases such as ischemia/reperfusion injury, inflammation, and after exposure to cigarette smoke. Consequently, antioxidants have been shown to successfully prevent the sequelae of these conditions, ranging from tissue infarction to atherogenesis. In this study we investigated whether, via its established superoxide dismutase-like activity, a novel polynitroxyl hemoglobin-based oxygen carrier (PNH), could affect the stimulation of leukocyte rolling and adhesion to endothelial cells in response to cigarette smoke. Using the dorsal skin fold chamber model for intravital microscopic observation of leukocyte/endothelium and -/platelet interactions in hamsters, we could demonstrate that cigarette smoke exposure elicited in control animals the rolling and adhesion of leukocytes along the endothelium of postcapillary venules and also of arterioles, as well as the formation of leukocyte/platelet aggregates. In contrast to the hemoglobin based oxygen carrier (HBOC) alone, that showed no therapeutic benefit, PNH significantly inhibited these proadhesive processes secondary to cigarette smoke. Also, PNH significantly reduced the formation of leukocyte/platelet aggregates in the blood stream of the cigarette smoke-exposed animals. These effects are not due to changes in microhemodynamic conditions, because wall shear rates remained unchanged in all three groups of animals.  相似文献   

13.
4-(Methylnitrosamino)-1-(3-pyridyl)-1-butanone (NNK), a tobacco-specific nitrosamine, induces lung adenomas in A/J mice following a single intraperitoneal (i.p.) injection. However, inhalation of mainstream cigarette smoke does not induce or promote NNK-induced lung tumors in this mouse strain purported to be sensitive to chemically-induced lung tumorigenesis. The critical events for NNK-induced lung tumorigenesis in A/J mice is thought to involve O(6)-methylguanine (O(6)MeG) adduct formation, GC-->AT transitional mispairing, and activation of the K-ras proto-oncogene. The objective of this study was to test the hypothesis that a smoke-induced shift in NNK metabolism led to the observed decrease in O(6)MeG adducts in the lung and liver of A/J mice co-administered NNK with a concomitant 2-h exposure to cigarette smoke as observed in previous studies. Following 2 h nose-only exposure to mainstream cigarette smoke (600 mg total suspended particulates/m(3) of air), mice (n=12) were administered 7.5 micromol NNK (10 microCi [5-3H]NNK) by i.p. injection. A control group of 12 mice was sham-exposed to HEPA-filtered air for 2 h prior to i.p. administration of 7.5 micromol NNK (10 microCi [5-3H]NNK). Exposure to mainstream cigarette smoke had no effect on total excretion of NNK metabolites in 24 h urine; however, the metabolite pattern was significantly changed. Mice exposed to mainstream cigarette smoke excreted 25% more 4-(methylnitrosamino)-1-(3-pyridyl)-1-butanol (NNAL) than control mice, a statistically significant increase (P<0.0001). Cigarette smoke exposure significantly reduced alpha-hydroxylation of NNK to potential methylating species; this is based on the 15% reduction in excretion of the 4-(3-pyridyl)-4-hydroxybutanoic acid and 42% reduction in excretion of 4-(3-pyridyl)-4-oxobutanoic acid versus control. Detoxication of NNK and NNAL by pyridine-N-oxidation, and glucuronidation of NNAL were not significantly different in the two groups of mice. The observed reduction in alpha-hydroxylation of NNK to potential methylating species in mainstream cigarette smoke-exposed A/J mice provides further mechanistic support for earlier studies demonstrating that concurrent inhalation of mainstream cigarette smoke results in a significant reduction of NNK-induced O(6)MeG adduct formation in lung and liver of A/J mice compared to mice treated only with NNK.  相似文献   

14.
Cigarette smokers have been reported to void urine which is more mutagenic than that voided by non-smokers, but the specific urinary mutagen(s) have not been identified. Since mechanistic studies are best performed in animal models, the objective of this study was to determine if a model to study the role of cigarette smoke and its components in urinary mutagenicity could be developed in rats. XAD-2 resin was used to concentrate the urine and the microsuspension modification of the Ames test used to quantify mutagenicity. Nicotine administered by intraperitoneal injection at 0.8 mg/kg (the maximum tolerated dose) or inhalation of carbon monoxide for 14 days at the maximum tolerated dose (1800 ppm, resulting in 68% carboxyhemoglobin) did not increase urinary mutagenicity. Cigarette smoke condensate (CSC) prepared by electrostatic precipitation of mainstream smoke increased urinary mutagenicity at doses of 100 and 200 mg/kg when administered acutely by either i.p. injection or gavage, verifying that the assay system was capable of detecting cigarette smoke-related mutagens in the urine. However, cigarette smoke administered by the appropriate route of exposure, nose-only inhalation, for 1, 7, 14 or 90 days (1 h per day) did not increase urinary mutagenicity. The smoke concentration administered was at or near the maximum tolerated dose as evidenced by carboxyhemoglobin concentrations of approximately 50%, and of 10% or more weight loss in exposed animals. Thus, although cigarette smoke condensate is mutagenic in vitro and mutagenic urine was observed when rats were given high doses of CSC by inappropriate routes of administration, acute or subchronic inhalation exposure to the maximum tolerated dose of whole cigarette smoke did not increase urinary mutagenicity in rats. These results indicate that the rat may be an inappropriate model to study urinary mutagenicity following the inhalation of tobacco smoke.  相似文献   

15.

Background

Skeletal muscle dysfunction is common in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), a disease mainly caused by chronic cigarette use. An important proportion of patients with COPD have decreased muscle mass, suggesting that chronic cigarette smoke exposure may interfere with skeletal muscle cellular equilibrium. Therefore, the main objective of this study was to investigate the kinetic of the effects that cigarette smoke exposure has on skeletal muscle cell signaling involved in protein homeostasis and to assess the reversibility of these effects.

Methods

A mouse model of cigarette smoke exposure was used to assess skeletal muscle changes. BALB/c mice were exposed to cigarette smoke or room air for 8 weeks, 24 weeks or 24 weeks followed by 60 days of cessation. The gastrocnemius and soleus muscles were collected and the activation state of key mediators involved in protein synthesis and degradation was assessed.

Results

Gastrocnemius and soleus were smaller in mice exposed to cigarette smoke for 8 and 24 weeks compared to room air exposed animals. Pro-degradation proteins were induced at the mRNA level after 8 and 24 weeks. Twenty-four weeks of cigarette smoke exposure induced pro-degradation proteins and reduced Akt phosphorylation and glycogen synthase kinase-3β quantity. A 60-day smoking cessation period reversed the cell signaling alterations induced by cigarette smoke exposure.

Conclusions

Repeated cigarette smoke exposure induces reversible muscle signaling alterations that are dependent on the duration of the cigarette smoke exposure. These results highlights a beneficial aspect associated with smoking cessation.  相似文献   

16.
The pathogenesis of cigarette smoke-induced pulmonary hypertension is not understood. We have previously shown that smoke rapidly and persistently, but discoordinately, upregulates gene expression of mediators that control vasoconstriction, vasoproliferation, and vasorelaxation in small intrapulmonary arteries. To investigate the possibility that smoke also induces endothelial dysfunction, a finding common to other forms of pulmonary hypertension, we exposed guinea pigs to smoke or air (control) daily for 2 wk and then prepared precision-cut lung slices. After exposure to endothelin-1, a vasoconstrictor, intra-acinar arteries in lung slices derived from smoke-exposed animals constricted more rapidly (greater constriction at a given concentration of endothelin) than did vessels from air-exposed animals. To examine relaxation responses, arteries were constricted with the vasoconstrictor U-46619 and then relaxed with progressively increasing doses of acetylcholine. Vessels from smokers had a delayed response to acetylcholine compared with vessels from controls. The NO synthase inhibitor N(G)-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester reduced relaxation in both control and smoke-exposed arteries, whereas the NO donor sodium nitroprusside increased relaxation of the smoke-exposed arteries, confirming that endothelial dysfunction with decreased effective NO production is present. These findings show that precision cut lung slices can be used to examine the physiological effects of cigarette smoke on intra-acinar pulmonary arteries and indicate that even relatively short-term exposure to smoke produces endothelial dysfunction with a resulting tendency to earlier constriction and later relaxation in cigarette smokers. These changes may be important in the development of pulmonary hypertension.  相似文献   

17.
Previous studies of 2 h of exposure to NO2 at high urban atmospheric levels (i.e., 0.50-1.0 ppm), utilizing light-to-moderate exercise for up to 1 h have failed to demonstrate significant pulmonary dysfunction in healthy humans. To test the hypothesis that heavy sustained exercise would elicit pulmonary dysfunction on exposure to 0.60 ppm NO2 and/or enhance the effects of exposure to 0.30 ppm O3, 40 aerobically trained young adults (20 males and 20 females) completed 1 h of continuous exercise at work rates eliciting a mean minute ventilation of 70 and 50 l/min for the males and females, respectively. Exposures to filtered air, 0.60 ppm NO2, 0.30 ppm O3, and 0.60 ppm NO2 plus 0.30 ppm O3 were randomly delivered via an obligatory mouthpiece inhalation system. Treatment effects were assessed by standard pulmonary function tests and exercise ventilatory and subjective symptoms response. Two-way analysis of variance with repeated measures and post hoc analyses revealed a statistically significant (P less than 0.05) effect of O3 on forced expiratory parameters, specific airway resistance, exercise ventilatory response, and reported subjective symptoms of respiratory discomfort. In contrast, no significant effect of NO2 was observed nor was there any significant interaction of NO2 and O3 in combination. There were no significant differences between male and female responses to gas mixture treatments. It was concluded that inhalation of 0.60 ppm NO2 for 1 h while engaged in heavy sustained exercise does not elicit effects evidenced by measurement techniques used in this study nor evoke additive effects beyond those induced by 0.30 ppm O3 in healthy young adults.  相似文献   

18.
The effect of whole cigarette smoke exposure on bone-marrow sister-chromatid exchanges (SCEs) was studied in B6C3F1 mice. Animals were exposed nose-only to 10% (v/v) cigarette smoke 5 days/week for 2 weeks. Four dose levels of cigarette smoke (1, 4, 9 and 18 exposures/day) were studied using 2 cigarette types, Kentucky reference 3A1 (3A1) and American Blend (AB). A single exposure represented approximately 1 cigarette. A dose-dependent increase in SCEs was observed for both the 3A1 and AB cigarettes at dose levels which had no effect on bone-marrow cell-replication kinetics. These findings represent the first demonstration of a dose-responsive increase in cigarette smoke-induced SCEs in a rodent model system.  相似文献   

19.
This paper describes a non-oxidative impairment of the biological function of alpha 1-proteinase inhibitor by cigarette smoke. Aqueous solutions of cigarette smoke are able to decrease the rate constant kass for the inhibition of porcine pancreatic elastase by human plasma alpha 1-proteinase inhibitor. The value of kass decreases linearly with the concentration of smoke (from 2.2 X 10(5) M-1 s-1 to 0.6 X 10(5) M-1 s-1). This effect is not due to an oxidation of the inhibitor. When pancreatic elastase is reacted with elastin in the presence of alpha 1-proteinase inhibitor and cigarette smoke solution, elastolysis occurs at a rate nearly identical to that observed in the absence of inhibitor. This effect is due to a smoke-induced decrease in kass. These observations may serve as a model of biological regulation of proteolysis via a change in the rate constant for a proteinase-proteinase inhibitor association. The influence of cigarette smoke on the inhibition of human neutrophil elastase by alpha 1-proteinase inhibitor could not be studied in detail because the enzyme precipitates in the presence of concentrated smoke solution.  相似文献   

20.
We hypothesized that the high concentrations of reactive nitrogen species in cigarette smoke and the known stimulatory effects of cigarette smoke on the inflammatory immune systems would lead to the formation of 5-nitro-γ-tocopherol (NGT). In order to assess γ-tocopherol nitration, human plasma was exposed in vitro to gas phase cigarette smoke (GPCS) or air for up to 6 h. A liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS) method was developed to quantitate NGT. Detector response was linear from 0.1 to 3 pmol NGT, with a detection limit of 20 fmol. After a 1 h lag time, 6 h plasma exposure to GPCS depleted 75% of -T, 60% of γ-T and increased NGT from 3 to 134 nmol/l. The increase in NGT accounted for 20% of the γ-T decrease. NGT also correlated (R2 = 0.9043) with nitrate concentrations in GPCS-exposed plasma. The physiologic relevance of NGT was evaluated in a group of healthy humans. Smokers (n = 15) had plasma NGT concentrations double those of nonsmokers (n = 19), regardless of corrections using lipids or γ-T; plasma -T and γ-T concentrations were similar between the groups. Our results show that LC-MS can be successfully used for NGT quantitation in biologic samples. Importantly, NGT in smokers' plasma suggests that cigarette smoking causes increased nitrosative stress.  相似文献   

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