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(Circulation. 2004;110:1140-1147.)
© 2004 American Heart Association, Inc.
Original Articles |
From the Bristol Heart Institute, University of Bristol, Bristol, UK.
Correspondence to Dr Jamie Y. Jeremy, Department of Cardiac Surgery, Bristol Royal Infirmary, Bristol BS2 8HW, UK. E-mail j.y.jeremy{at}bris.ac.uk
Received May 1, 2003; de novo received December 16, 2003; revision received March 18, 2004; accepted March 24, 2004.
Background Although nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) are ineffective in treating acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), inhalational NO has proved to be useful. NO-donating NSAIDs may therefore be more effective in treating ARDS than NSAIDs alone. Because oxidant stress is central to the pathophysiology of ARDS, the effect of nitroaspirins (NCX 4016, NCX 4040, and NCX 4050) compared with morpholinosydnonimine (SIN-1; an NO donor) and aspirin (ASA) on superoxide (O2·) formation and gp91phox (an active catalytic subunit of NADPH oxidase) expression in pig pulmonary artery vascular smooth muscle cells (PAVSMCs) and endothelial cells (PAECs) was investigated.
Methods and Results Cultured PAVSMCs and PAECs were incubated with lipopolysaccharide (LPS), tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-
, and interleukin (IL)-1
(with or without NO-ASA, SIN-1, or ASA) for 16 hours, and O2· release was measured by use of the reduction of ferricytochrome c. The expression of gp91phox was assessed by use of Western blotting. LPS, TNF-
, and IL-1
all stimulated the formation of O2· and expression of gp91phox in both PAVSMCs and PAECs, an effect inhibited by NADPH oxidase inhibitors, diphenyleneiodonium, and apocynin. SIN-1, NCX 4016, and NCX 4050 but not ASA alone inhibited the formation of O2· and expression of gp91phox.
Conclusions LPS and cytokines promote the formation of O2· in PAVSMCs and PAECs through an augmentation of NADPH oxidase activity, which in turn is prevented by NO. Thus, NO may play a protective role in preventing excess O2· formation, but its negation by O2· may augment the progress of ARDS. The inhibitory effect of nitroaspirins suggests that they may be therapeutically useful in treating ARDS through the suppression of NADPH oxidase upregulation and O2· formation.
Key Words: superoxides NADPH oxidase nitric oxide respiratory distress syndrome, adult pulmonary artery
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