Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

The Enhancing Effect of Tumour Necrosis Factor‐α on Oxidative Stress in Endotoxemia

View through CrossRef
Abstract:The enhancing effect of tumour necrosis factor‐α (TNF‐α) on oxidative stress with or without a sublethal dose of endotoxin was examined. The mortality of mice treated with recombinant human TNF‐α (1X104units/mouse, intravenously) and endotoxin (0.01‐1 mg/kg, intraperitoneally) was dependent on the dose of endotoxin. The liver lipid peroxide level, superoxide anion generation and serum lactate dehydrogenase activity, especially serum lactate dehydrogenase‐5 isozyme leakage, in mice 2‐4 hr after administration of recombinant human TNF to endotoxin‐pretreated mice (0.5 mg/kg, intraperitoneally) were markedly higher than in those without endotoxin, whereas the administration of recombinant human TNF significantly decreased the non‐protein sulfhydryl level, superoxide dismutase and glutathione peroxide activities in the liver of endotoxin‐injected mice compared with those in mice treated with recombinant human TNF or endotoxin alone. Furthermore, findings clearly demonstrated that J774A.1 cells stimulated with recombinant human TNF (1X104units/ml) can effectively produce nitric oxide in the presence of endotoxin, and the production was dependent on the dose of endotoxin (0.01‐10 μg/ml). The level of lipid peroxide in mice 4 hr after administration of recombinant human TNF and lead acetate (50 mg/kg, intravenously) was markedly higher than that in the mice treated with recombinant human TNF alone. By contrast, injection of polymyxin‐B (20 mg/kg, intraperitoneally, an anti‐endotoxin drug) markedly decreased the lipid peroxide level in the liver of the mice treated with recombinant human TNF and lead acetate. These findings suggest that the oxidative stress caused by TNF occurs as a enhancing effect of endotoxion or by bacterial translocation from the intestinal gut under reduction of reticuloendothelial system function in various disease states, and that the effect of TNF may cause a marked increase of toxicity of oxidative stress by endotoxin.
Title: The Enhancing Effect of Tumour Necrosis Factor‐α on Oxidative Stress in Endotoxemia
Description:
Abstract:The enhancing effect of tumour necrosis factor‐α (TNF‐α) on oxidative stress with or without a sublethal dose of endotoxin was examined.
The mortality of mice treated with recombinant human TNF‐α (1X104units/mouse, intravenously) and endotoxin (0.
01‐1 mg/kg, intraperitoneally) was dependent on the dose of endotoxin.
The liver lipid peroxide level, superoxide anion generation and serum lactate dehydrogenase activity, especially serum lactate dehydrogenase‐5 isozyme leakage, in mice 2‐4 hr after administration of recombinant human TNF to endotoxin‐pretreated mice (0.
5 mg/kg, intraperitoneally) were markedly higher than in those without endotoxin, whereas the administration of recombinant human TNF significantly decreased the non‐protein sulfhydryl level, superoxide dismutase and glutathione peroxide activities in the liver of endotoxin‐injected mice compared with those in mice treated with recombinant human TNF or endotoxin alone.
Furthermore, findings clearly demonstrated that J774A.
1 cells stimulated with recombinant human TNF (1X104units/ml) can effectively produce nitric oxide in the presence of endotoxin, and the production was dependent on the dose of endotoxin (0.
01‐10 μg/ml).
The level of lipid peroxide in mice 4 hr after administration of recombinant human TNF and lead acetate (50 mg/kg, intravenously) was markedly higher than that in the mice treated with recombinant human TNF alone.
By contrast, injection of polymyxin‐B (20 mg/kg, intraperitoneally, an anti‐endotoxin drug) markedly decreased the lipid peroxide level in the liver of the mice treated with recombinant human TNF and lead acetate.
These findings suggest that the oxidative stress caused by TNF occurs as a enhancing effect of endotoxion or by bacterial translocation from the intestinal gut under reduction of reticuloendothelial system function in various disease states, and that the effect of TNF may cause a marked increase of toxicity of oxidative stress by endotoxin.

Related Results

Tumour angiogenesis: vascular growth and survival
Tumour angiogenesis: vascular growth and survival
Angiogenesis starts at the edge of a malignant epithelial tumour concurrently with tumour cell invasion and stromatogenesis, i.e. the formation of specific connective tissue stroma...
A comprehensive investigation to oxidative stress balance in human stomach adenocarcinoma
A comprehensive investigation to oxidative stress balance in human stomach adenocarcinoma
Abstract OBJECTIVES : High level of pro-oxidative stress was hallmark of stomach adenocarcinoma (STAD), which depended on the...
Tumour Immunology
Tumour Immunology
Abstract Tumour immunology is central to our understanding of the mechanisms of both tumour rejection and tumour progression. Vir...
Impact of tumour necrosis factor-a on ambulatory arterial stiffness index in prehypertensives
Impact of tumour necrosis factor-a on ambulatory arterial stiffness index in prehypertensives
Objective To investigate the impact of tumour necrosis factor-a on ambulatory arterial stiffness index in prehypertensives. ...
Nitric Oxide Measurements during Endotoxemia
Nitric Oxide Measurements during Endotoxemia
Abstract Background: Excessive continuous NO release from inducible NO synthase over prolonged periods under pathological conditions, such as endotoxemia, contribute...
Role of preprotachykinin-A gene products on multiple organ injury in LPS-induced endotoxemia
Role of preprotachykinin-A gene products on multiple organ injury in LPS-induced endotoxemia
AbstractEndotoxemia is a life-threatening, inflammatory condition that involves multiple organ injury and dysfunction. Preprotachykinin-A (PPT-A) gene products, substance P (SP), a...

Back to Top