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Macrophages and antioxidant status in the NOD mouse pancreas
Authors:Gianpaolo Papaccio  Bruno De Luca  Francesco Aurelio Pisanti
Affiliation:1. Institute of Topographical Anatomy, School of Medicine, Second University of Naples, 5–80138 Naples, Italy;2. Department of Clinical Pathology, ASL 1, 80044 Ottaviano, Naples, Italy
Abstract:This study showed that citiolone (CIT), a free radical scavenger, significantly increased superoxide dismutase (P < 0.001 vs. untreated NOD, NMMA-treated, and silica-treated animals), catalase (P < 0.01 vs. untreated NOD), and glutathione peroxidase (P < 0.001 vs. untreated NOD and C57BL6/J) values. Silica treatment was capable of counteracting the plasma antioxidant capacity (TRAP) decrease observed in untreated NOD mice, although it did not block the blood glucose rise and insulitis progression in type 1 diabetes significantly. Conversely, early silica administration was able to deplete macrophages (as demonstrated by immunocytochemistry) and to block the rise in blood glucose levels and insulitis progression significantly. Silica-treated animals in this study showed the highest TRAP levels, demonstrating that depletion of macrophages also was able to improve the antioxidant status. This study suggested that macrophages are essential for type 1 diabetes development and showed that they also are involved when the antioxidant status is affected. The reported findings are significant in view of previous studies indicating that oxygen and/or nitrogen free radicals contribute to the islet β-cell destruction in type 1 diabetes animal models. J. Cell. Biochem. 71:479–490, 1998. © 1998 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
Keywords:macrophages  antioxidant status  NOD mice  immunocytochemistry  type 1 diabetes
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