968 resultados para INDUCED CARDIAC PROTECTION


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BACKGROUND: Exposure to intermittent hypoxia (IH) may enhance cardiac function and protects heart against ischemia-reperfusion (I/R) injury. To elucidate the underlying mechanisms, we developed a cardioprotective IH model that was characterized at hemodynamic, biochemical and molecular levels. METHODS: Mice were exposed to 4 daily IH cycles (each composed of 2-min at 6-8% O2 followed by 3-min reoxygenation for 5 times) for 14 days, with normoxic mice as controls. Mice were then anesthetized and subdivided in various subgroups for analysis of contractility (pressure-volume loop), morphology, biochemistry or resistance to I/R (30-min occlusion of the left anterior descending coronary artery (LAD) followed by reperfusion and measurement of the area at risk and infarct size). In some mice, the phosphatidylinositide 3-kinase (PI3K) inhibitor wortmannin was administered (24 µg/kg ip) 15 min before LAD. RESULTS: We found that IH did not induce myocardial hypertrophy; rather both contractility and cardiac function improved with greater number of capillaries per unit volume and greater expression of VEGF-R2, but not of VEGF. Besides increasing the phosphorylation of protein kinase B (Akt) and the endothelial isoform of NO synthase with respect to control, IH reduced the infarct size and post-LAD proteins carbonylation, index of oxidative damage. Administration of wortmannin reduced the level of Akt phosphorylation and worsened the infarct size. CONCLUSION: We conclude that the PI3K/Akt pathway is crucial for IH-induced cardioprotection and may represent a viable target to reduce myocardial I/R injury.

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Despite the fact that mineralocorticoid receptor (MR) antagonist drugs such as spironolactone and eplerenone reduce the mortality in heart failure patients, there is, thus far, no unambiguous demonstration of a functional role of MR in cardiac cells. The aim of this work was to investigate the activation pathway(s) mediating corticosteroid-induced up-regulation of cardiac calcium current (ICa). In this study, using neonatal cardiomyocytes from MR or glucocorticoid receptor (GR) knockout (KO) mice, we show that MR is essential for corticosteroid-induced up-regulation of ICa. This study provides the first direct and unequivocal evidence for MR function in the heart.

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Obesity is associated with a chronic low-grade inflammation, and specific antiinflammatory interventions may be beneficial for the treatment of type 2 diabetes and other obesity-related diseases. The lipid kinase PI3Kγ is a central proinflammatory signal transducer that plays a major role in leukocyte chemotaxis, mast cell degranulation, and endothelial cell activation. It was also reported that PI3Kγ activity within hematopoietic cells plays an important role in obesity-induced inflammation and insulin resistance. Here, we show that protection from insulin resistance, metabolic inflammation, and fatty liver in mice lacking functional PI3Kγ is largely consequent to their leaner phenotype. We also show that this phenotype is largely based on decreased fat gain, despite normal caloric intake, consequent to increased energy expenditure. Furthermore, our data show that PI3Kγ action on diet-induced obesity depends on PI3Kγ activity within a nonhematopoietic compartment, where it promotes energetic efficiency for fat mass gain. We also show that metabolic modulation by PI3Kγ depends on its lipid kinase activity and might involve kinase-independent signaling. Thus, PI3Kγ is an unexpected but promising drug target for the treatment of obesity and its complications.

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OBJECTIVE: Interleukin-1 (IL-1) mediates ischemia-reperfusion injury and graft inflammation after heart transplantation. IL-1 affects target cells through two distinct types of transmembrane receptors, type-1 receptor (IL-1R1), which transduces the signal, and the non-signaling type-2 receptor (IL-1R2), which acts as a ligand sink that subtracts IL-1beta from IL-1R1. We analyzed the efficacy of adenovirus (Ad)-mediated gene transfer of a soluble IL-1R2-Ig fusion protein in delaying cardiac allograft rejection and the mechanisms underlying the protective effect. METHODS: IL-1 inhibition by IL-1R2-Ig was tested using an in vitro functional assay whereby endothelial cells preincubated with AdIL-1R2-Ig or control virus were stimulated with recombinant IL-1beta or tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha), and urokinase-type plasminogen activator (u-PA) induction was measured by zymography. AdIL-1R2-Ig was delivered to F344 rat donor hearts ex vivo, which were placed in the abdominal position in LEW hosts. Intragraft inflammatory cell infiltrates and proinflammatory cytokine expression were analyzed by immunohistochemistry and real-time reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR), respectively. RESULTS: IL-1R2-Ig specifically inhibited IL-1beta-induced u-PA responses in vitro. IL-1R2-Ig gene transfer reduced intragraft monocytes/macrophages and CD4(+) cell infiltrates (p<0.05), TNF-alpha and transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta) expression (p<0.05), and prolonged graft survival (15.6+/-5.7 vs 10.3+/-2.5 days with control vector and 10.1+/-2.1 days with buffer alone; p<0.01). AdIL-1R2-Ig combined with a subtherapeutic regimen of cyclosporin A (CsA) was superior to CsA alone (19.4+/-3.0 vs 15.9+/-1.8 days; p<0.05). CONCLUSIONS: Soluble IL-1 type-2 receptor gene transfer attenuates cardiac allograft rejection in a rat model. IL-1 inhibition may be useful as an adjuvant therapy in heart transplantation.

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OBJECTIVES: Current indications for therapeutic hypothermia (TH) are restricted to comatose patients with cardiac arrest (CA) due to ventricular fibrillation (VF) and without circulatory shock. Additional studies are needed to evaluate the benefit of this treatment in more heterogeneous groups of patients, including those with non-VF rhythms and/or shock and to identify early predictors of outcome in this setting. DESIGN: Prospective study, from December 2004 to October 2006. SETTING: 32-bed medico-surgical intensive care unit, university hospital. PATIENTS: Comatose patients with out-of-hospital CA. INTERVENTIONS: TH to 33 +/- 1 degrees C (external cooling, 24 hrs) was administered to patients resuscitated from CA due to VF and non-VF (including asystole or pulseless electrical activity), independently from the presence of shock. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: We hypothesized that simple clinical criteria available on hospital admission (initial arrest rhythm, duration of CA, and presence of shock) might help to identify patients who eventually survive and might most benefit from TH. For this purpose, outcome was related to these predefined variables. Seventy-four patients (VF 38, non-VF 36) were included; 46% had circulatory shock. Median duration of CA (time from collapse to return of spontaneous circulation [ROSC]) was 25 mins. Overall survival was 39.2%. However, only 3.1% of patients with time to ROSC > 25 mins survived, as compared to 65.7% with time to ROSC < or = 25 mins. Using a logistic regression analysis, time from collapse to ROSC, but not initial arrest rhythm or presence of shock, independently predicted survival at hospital discharge. CONCLUSIONS: Time from collapse to ROSC is strongly associated with outcome following VF and non-VF cardiac arrest treated with therapeutic hypothermia and could therefore be helpful to identify patients who benefit most from active induced cooling.

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It has not been well established whether the mechanisms participating in pH regulation in the anoxic-reoxygenated developing myocardium resemble those operating in the adult. We have specially examined the importance of Na+/H+ exchange (NHE) and HCO3-dependent transports in cardiac activity after changes in extracellular pH (pHo). Spontaneously contracting hearts isolated from 4-day-old chick embryos were submitted to single or repeated anoxia (1 min) followed by reoxygenation (10 min). The chronotropic, dromotropic and inotropic responses of the hearts were determined in standard HCO3- buffer at pHo 7.4 and at pHo 6.5 (hypercapnic acidosis). In distinct experiments, acidotic anoxia preceded reoxygenation at pHo 7.4. NHE was blocked with amiloride derivative HMA (1 micro mol/l) and HCO3-dependent transports were inactivated by replacement of HCO3 or blockade with stilbene derivative DIDS (100 micro mol/l). Anoxia caused transient tachycardia, depressed mechanical function and induced contracture. Reoxygenation temporarily provoked cardiac arrest, atrio-ventricular (AV) block, arrhythmias and depression of contractility. Addition of DIDS or substitution of HCO3 at pHo 7.4 had the same effects as acidosis per se, i.e. shortened contractile activity and increased incidence of arrhythmias during anoxia, prolonged cardioplegia and provoked arrhythmias at reoxygenation. Under anoxia at pHo 6.5/reoxygenation at pHo 7.4, cardioplegia, AV block and arrhythmias were all markedly prolonged. Interestingly, in the latter protocol, DIDS suppressed AV block and arrhythmias during reoxygenation, whereas HMA had no effect. Thus, intracellular pH regulation in the anoxic-reoxygenated embryonic heart appears to depend predominantly on HCO3 availability and transport. Furthermore, pharmacological inhibition of anion transport can protect against reoxygenation-induced dysfunction.

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SUMMARYAim: The embryonic/fetal heart is highly sensitive to oxygenation level and a transient uteroplacental hypoperfusion can lead to oxyradicals overproduction. Information about the molecular mechanisms underlying ischemia-reperfusion (I-R) injury in the developing heart is lacking. The Janus Kinase 2 / Signal Transducer and Activator of Transcription 3 (JAK2/STAT3) pathway, required for cardiogenesis and involved in protection of the adult heart against I-R, could also play a key role in the response of the fetal myocardium to transient oxygen deprivation. The aim of the study was to characterize the involvement of JAK2/STAT3 pathway and its interaction with other signalling pathways in the developing heart transiently submitted to anoxia. Furthermore, the response of the embryonic heart to an exogenous oxidant stress (H2O2) in comparison to reoxygenation-induced endogenous oxyradicals has been investigated.Methods: Hearts isolated from 4-day-old chick embryos were submitted to anoxia (30min) and reoxygenation (80min) with or without the antioxidant MPG, the JAK2/STAT3 inhibitor AG490 or exposed to H202 (50|iM-lmM). The time course of phosphorylation of STAT3atyr0Sine7 and Reperfusion Injury Salvage Kinase (RISK) proteins (PI3K, Akt, GSK3B, Glycogen Synthase and ERK2) was determined in homogenate" and in enriched nuclear and cytoplasmic fractions. The STAT3 DNA-binding was determined by EMSA and the expression of STAT3 specific target genes by RT-PCR. The chrono-, dromo- and inotropic disturbances were also investigated by ECG and mechanical recordings.Results: Phosphorylation of STATSaP (P-Tyr STAT3a) was increased by reoxygenation and reduced by MPG or AG490. STAT3 and GSK36 were detected both in nuclear and cytoplasmic fractions while PI3K, Akt, GS and ERK2 were restricted to cytoplasm. Reoxygenation led to nuclear accumulation of STAT3 but unexpectedly without DNA- binding. AG490 decreased the reoxygenation-induced phosphorylation of STABa^, Akt, GS and ERK2 and phosphorylation/inhibition of GSK3B in the nucleus, exclusively. Inhibition of JAK2/STAT3 delayed recovery of atrial rate, worsened RR. variability and prolonged arrhythmias compared to control hearts. Cardiac activity was altered only at concentrations >500μΜ of H2O2. Moreover, ImM of H2O2 suppressed atrial activity in 45% of the hearts, atrioventricular conduction in 66% and augmented P-Tyr STAT3awhich led to an increase in the DNA-binding but no change in the expression of three STAT3 specific target genes (iNOS, MnSOD, Cox-2).Conclusion: In the developing heart, besides its nuclear translocation without transcriptional activity, ROS-activated STAT3a can rapidly interact with RISK proteins present in nucleus and cytoplasm and reduce the anoxia-reoxygenation-induced arrhythmias. Moreover, the embryonic heart is highly resistant to H2O2 and the atrial region is the less affected. The role of JAK2/STAT3 in the response to reoxygenation-induced oxyradicals is different from the response to strong exogenous oxidant stress where STAT3 DNA-binding activity is increased. Such findings provide a first step in understanding the modulation of signalling cascades in the fetal heart submitted to transient intrauterine oxygen deprivation.RESUMEIntroduction: Le coeur embryonnaire et foetal est très sensible au manque d'oxygène et une hypoperfusion utéroplacentaire transitoire peut conduire à une surproduction d'espèces radicalaires (ROS). Dans le coeur en développement les mécanismes moléculaires impliqués en situation d'ischémie-reperfusion (I-R) ne sont pas connus. La voie de signalisation JAK2/STAT3 (Janus Kinase 2 / Signal Transducer and Activator of Transcription 3), impliquée aussi bien dans la cardiogenèse précoce que dans la protection du coeur adulte contre l'I-R, pourrait jouer un rôle clé dans la réponse du myocarde foetal à un déficit en oxygène. Cette étude a permis d'étudier le rôle de la voie JAK2/STAT3 et son interaction avec d'autres voies de signalisation dans un modèle de coeur embryonnaire soumis à un épisode anoxique. En outre, les effets du stress oxydant endogène provoqué par la réoxygénation ont été comparés à ceux du stress oxydatif exogène induit par du peroxyde d'hydrogène (H2O2).Méthodes: Des coeurs isolés d'embryons de poulet âgés de 4 jours ont été soumis à une anoxie (30min) suivie d'une réoxygénation (80min) en présence ou non de l'antioxydant MPG et de l'inhibiteur de JAK2/STAT3 AG490 ou exposés à de 1Ή202 (50μΜ-1πιΜ). L'évolution temporelle de la phosphorylation de 8ΤΑΤ3α*ΓΟδίη6705 (P-Tyr STAT3a) et celle de la phosphorylation des protéines de la voie RISK (Reperfusion Injury Salvage Kinase: PI3K, Akt, GSK3B, glycogène synthase GS et ERK2) ont été déterminés dans l'homogénat et dans les fractions nucléaire et cytopiasmique du myocarde. La liaison de STAT3 à l'ADN a été déterminée par EMSA et l'expression de gènes cibles de STAT3 (iNOS, MnSOD, Cox2) par RT-PCR. Les effets chrono-, dromo- et inotropes ont été déterminés par les enregistrements de l'ECG et de l'activité contractile ventriculaire.Résultats: STAT3 et GSK3B étaient présents dans les fractions nucléaire et cytopiasmique tandis que PI3K, Akt, GS et ERK2 n'étaient détectées que dans la fraction cytopiasmique. L'augmentation de P-Tyr STAT3a provoquée par la réoxygénation était significativement réduite par le MPG ou PAG490. La réoxygénation entraînait l'accumulation nucléaire de STAT3, mais étonnamment sans liaison avec l'ADN. A la réoxygénation TAG490 diminuait la phosphorylation d'Akt, GS et ERK2 ainsi que celle de GSK36 mais exclusivement dans la fraction nucléaire. L'inhibition de JAK2/STAT3 retardait également la récupération du rythme cardiaque et prolongeait la durée des arythmies. L'activité cardiaque n'était perturbée par de ΓΗ2Ο2 qu'à des concentrations >500μΜ. A ImM, ΓΗ2Ο2 supprimait l'activité auriculaire dans 45% des coeurs et la conduction auriculo-ventriculaire dans 66% et augmentait la formation de P-Tyr STAT3a et sa liaison à l'ADN sans modifier l'expression des gènes cibles.Conclusion: Les ROS produits par l'anoxie-réoxygénation activent STAT3a qui subit une translocation dans le noyau sans se lier à l'ADN et interagit rapidement avec des protéines de la voie RISK dans les compartiments nucléaire et cytopiasmique du coeur embryonnaire. Ce dernier, en particulier au niveau des oreillettes, se révèle très résistant au puissant stress oxydatif de l'H202 qui se différencie du stress lié à la réoxygénation en favorisant la liaison de STAT3 à l'ADN. Ces résultats originaux permettent une meilleure compréhension des mécanismes qui peuvent améliorer la récupération du coeur en développement après un épisode hypoxique intra-utérin.

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Hearing loss can be caused by a variety of insults, including acoustic trauma and exposure to ototoxins, that principally effect the viability of sensory hair cells via the MAP kinase (MAPK) cell death signaling pathway that incorporates c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK). We evaluated the otoprotective efficacy of D-JNKI-1, a cell permeable peptide that blocks the MAPK-JNK signal pathway. The experimental studies included organ cultures of neonatal mouse cochlea exposed to an ototoxic drug and cochleae of adult guinea pigs that were exposed to either an ototoxic drug or acoustic trauma. Results obtained from the organ of Corti explants demonstrated that the MAPK-JNK signal pathway is associated with injury and that blocking of this signal pathway prevented apoptosis in areas of aminoglycoside damage. Treatment of the neomycin-exposed organ of Corti explants with D-JNKI-1 completely prevented hair cell death initiated by this ototoxin. Results from in vivo studies showed that direct application of D-JNKI-1 into the scala tympani of the guinea pig cochlea prevented nearly all hair cell death and permanent hearing loss induced by neomycin ototoxicity. Local delivery of D-JNKI-1 also prevented acoustic trauma-induced permanent hearing loss in a dose-dependent manner. These results indicate that the MAPK-JNK signal pathway is involved in both ototoxicity and acoustic trauma-induced hair cell loss and permanent hearing loss. Blocking this signal pathway with D-JNKI-1 is of potential therapeutic value for long-term protection of both the morphological integrity and physiological function of the organ of Corti during times of oxidative stress.

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In vivo exposure to chronic hypoxia (CH) depresses myocardial performance and tolerance to ischemia, but daily reoxyenation during CH (CHR) confers cardioprotection. To elucidate the underlying mechanism, we tested the role of phosphatidylinositol-3-kinase-protein kinase B (Akt) and p42/p44 extracellular signal-regulated kinases (ERK1/2), which are known to be associated with protection against ischemia/reperfusion (I/R). Male Sprague-Dawley rats were maintained for two weeks under CH (10% O(2)) or CHR (as CH but with one-hour daily exposure to room air). Then, hearts were either frozen for biochemical analyses or Langendorff-perfused to determine performance (intraventricular balloon) and tolerance to 30-min global ischemia and 45-min reperfusion, assessed as recovery of performance after I/R and infarct size (tetrazolium staining). Additional hearts were perfused in the presence of 15 micromol/L LY-294002 (inhibitor of Akt), 10 micromol/L UO-126 (inhibitor of ERK1/2) or 10 micromol/L PD-98059 (less-specific inhibitor of ERK1/2) given 15 min before ischemia and throughout the first 20 min of reperfusion. Whereas total Akt and ERK1/2 were unaffected by CH and CHR in vivo, in CHR hearts the phosphorylation of both proteins was higher than in CH hearts. This was accompanied by better performance after I/R (heart rate x developed pressure), lower end-diastolic pressure and reduced infarct size. Whereas the treatment with LY-294002 decreased the phosphorylation of Akt only, the treatment with UO-126 decreased ERK1/2, and that with PD-98059 decreased both Akt and ERK1/2. In all cases, the cardioprotective effect led by CHR was lost. In conclusion, in vivo daily reoxygenation during CH enhances Akt and ERK1/2 signaling. This response was accompanied by a complex phenotype consisting in improved resistance to stress, better myocardial performance and lower infarct size after I/R. Selective inhibition of Akt and ERK1/2 phosphorylation abolishes the beneficial effects of the reoxygenation. Therefore, Akt and ERK1/2 have an important role to mediate cardioprotection by reoxygenation during CH in vivo.

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Initial non-inflammatory demyelination in canine distemper virus infection (CDV) develops against a background of severe immunosuppression and is therefore, thought to be virus-induced. However, recently we found a marked invasion of T cells throughout the central nervous system (CNS) in dogs with acute distemper despite drastic damage to the immune system. In the present study, this apparent paradox was further investigated by immunophenotyping of lymphocytes, following experimental CDV challenge in vaccinated and non-vaccinated dogs. In contrast to CDV infected, unprotected dogs, vaccinated dogs did not become immunosuppressed and exhibited a strong antiviral immune response following challenge with virulent CDV. In unprotected dogs rapid and drastic lymphopenia was initially due to depletion of T cells. In peripheral blood, CD4(+) T cells were more sensitive and depleted earlier and for a longer time than CD8(+) cells which recovered soon. In the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) we could observe an increase in the T cell to B cell and CD8(+) to CD4(+) ratios. Thus, partial protection of the CD8(+) cell population could explain why part of the immune function in acute distemper is preserved. As found earlier, T cells invaded the CNS parenchyma in these dogs but also in the protected challenged dogs, which did not develop any CNS disease at all. Since markers of T cell activation were upregulated in both groups of animals, this phenomenon could in part be related to non-specific penetration of activated T cells through the blood brain barrier. However, in diseased animals much larger numbers of T cells were found in the CNS than in the protected dogs, suggesting that massive invasion of T cells in the brain requires CDV expression in the CNS.

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PURPOSE: Transferrin (Tf) expression is enhanced by aging and inflammation in humans. We investigated the role of transferrin in glial protection. METHODS: We generated transgenic mice (Tg) carrying the complete human transferrin gene on a C57Bl/6J genetic background. We studied human (hTf) and mouse (mTf) transferrin localization in Tg and wild-type (WT) C57Bl/6J mice using immunochemistry with specific antibodies. Müller glial (MG) cells were cultured from explants and characterized using cellular retinaldehyde binding protein (CRALBP) and vimentin antibodies. They were further subcultured for study. We incubated cells with FeCl(3)-nitrilotriacetate to test for the iron-induced stress response; viability was determined by direct counting and measurement of lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) activity. Tf expression was determined by reverse transcriptase-quantitative PCR with human- or mouse-specific probes. hTf and mTf in the medium were assayed by ELISA or radioimmunoassay (RIA), respectively. RESULTS: mTf was mainly localized in retinal pigment epithelium and ganglion cell layers in retina sections of both mouse lines. hTf was abundant in MG cells. The distribution of mTf and hTf mRNA was consistent with these findings. mTf and hTf were secreted into the medium of MG cell primary cultures. Cells from Tg mice secreted hTf at a particularly high level. However, both WT and Tg cell cultures lose their ability to secrete Tf after a few passages. Tg MG cells secreting hTf were more resistant to iron-induced stress toxicity than those no longer secreted hTf. Similarly, exogenous human apo-Tf, but not human holo-Tf, conferred resistance to iron-induced stress on MG cells from WT mice. CONCLUSIONS: hTf localization in MG cells from Tg mice was reminiscent of that reported for aged human retina and age-related macular degeneration, both conditions associated with iron deposition. The role of hTf in protection against toxicity in Tg MG cells probably involves an adaptive mechanism developed in neural retina to control iron-induced stress.

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BACKGROUND & AIMS: Clostridium difficile-associated disease (CDAD) is the leading cause of nosocomial diarrhea in the United States. C difficile toxins TcdA and TcdB breach the intestinal barrier and trigger mucosal inflammation and intestinal damage. The inflammasome is an intracellular danger sensor of the innate immune system. In the present study, we hypothesize that TcdA and TcdB trigger inflammasome-dependent interleukin (IL)-1beta production, which contributes to the pathogenesis of CDAD. METHODS: Macrophages exposed to TcdA and TcdB were assessed for IL-1beta production, an indication of inflammasome activation. Macrophages deficient in components of the inflammasome were also assessed. Truncated/mutated forms of TcdB were assessed for their ability to activate the inflammasome. The role of inflammasome signaling in vivo was assessed in ASC-deficient and IL-1 receptor antagonist-treated mice. RESULTS: TcdA and TcdB triggered inflammasome activation and IL-1beta secretion in macrophages and human mucosal biopsy specimens. Deletion of Nlrp3 decreased, whereas deletion of ASC completely abolished, toxin-induced IL-1beta release. TcdB-induced IL-1beta release required recognition of the full-length toxin but not its enzymatic function. In vivo, deletion of ASC significantly reduced toxin-induced inflammation and damage, an effect that was mimicked by pretreatment with the IL-1 receptor antagonist anakinra. CONCLUSIONS: TcdA and TcdB trigger IL-1beta release by activating an ASC-containing inflammasome, a response that contributes to toxin-induced inflammation and damage in vivo. Pretreating mice with the IL-1 receptor antagonist anakinra afforded the same level of protection that was observed in ASC-/- mice. These data suggest that targeting inflammasome or IL-1beta signaling may represent new therapeutic targets in the treatment of CDAD.

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Glutaredoxins are members of a superfamily of thiol disulfide oxidoreductases involved in maintaining the redox state of target proteins. In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, two glutaredoxins (Grx1 and Grx2) containing a cysteine pair at the active site had been characterized as protecting yeast cells against oxidative damage. In this work, another subfamily of yeast glutaredoxins (Grx3, Grx4, and Grx5) that differs from the first in containing a single cysteine residue at the putative active site is described. This trait is also characteristic for a number of glutaredoxins from bacteria to humans, with which the Grx3/4/5 group has extensive homology over two regions. Mutants lacking Grx5 are partially deficient in growth in rich and minimal media and also highly sensitive to oxidative damage caused by menadione and hydrogen peroxide. A significant increase in total protein carbonyl content is constitutively observed in grx5cells, and a number of specific proteins, including transketolase, appear to be highly oxidized in this mutant. The synthetic lethality of the grx5 and grx2 mutations on one hand and ofgrx5 with the grx3 grx4 combination on the other points to a complex functional relationship among yeast glutaredoxins, with Grx5 playing a specially important role in protection against oxidative stress both during ordinary growth conditions and after externally induced damage. Grx5-deficient mutants are also sensitive to osmotic stress, which indicates a relationship between the two types of stress in yeast cells.

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We have previously shown that oval cells harboring a genetically inactivated Met tyrosine kinase (Met−/− oval cells) are more sensitive to TGF-β-induced apoptosis than cells expressing a functional Met (Metflx/flx), demonstrating that the HGF/Met axis plays a pivotal role in oval cell survival. Here, we have examined the mechanism behind this effect and have found that TGF-β induced a mitochondria-dependent apoptotic cell death in Metflx/flx and Met−/− oval cells, associated with a marked increase in levels of the BH3-only proteins Bim and Bmf. Bmf plays a key role during TGF-β-mediated apoptosis since knocking down of BMF significantly diminished the apoptotic response in Met-/- oval cells. TGF-β also induced oxidative stress accompanied by NADPH oxidase 4 (Nox4) mRNA up-regulation and decreased protein levels of antioxidant enzymes. Antioxidants inhibit both TGF-β-induced caspase 3 activity and Bmf up-regulation, revealing an oxidative stress-dependent Bmf regulation by TGF-β. Notably, oxidative stress-related events were strongly amplified in Met−/− oval cells, emphasizing the critical role of Met in promoting survival. Pharmacological inhibition of PI3K did impair HGF-driven protection from TGF-β-induced apoptosis and increased sensitivity of Metflx/flx oval cells to TGF-ß by enhancing oxidative stress, reaching apoptotic indices similar to those obtained in Met−/− oval cells. Interestingly, both PI3K inhibition and/or knockdown itself resulted in caspase-3 activation and loss of viability in Metflx/flx oval cells, whereas no effect was observed in Met−/− oval cells. Altogether, results presented here provide solid evidences that both paracrine and autocrine HGF/Met signaling requires PI3K to promote mouse hepatic oval cell survival against TGF-β-induced oxidative stress and apoptosis.