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Eosinophils (Eos) are potent inflammatory cells and abundantly present in the sputum and lung of patients with allergic asthma. During both transit to and residence in the lung, Eos contact prosurvival cytokines, particularly IL-3, IL-5 and GM-CSF, that attenuate cell death. Cytokine signaling modulates the expression and function of a number of intracellular pro- and anti-apoptotic molecules. Both...
Apoptosis, the most common form of cell death, is a key mechanism in the build up and maintenance of both innate and adaptive immunity. Central to the apoptotic process is a family of intracellular cysteine proteases with aspartate-specificity, called caspases. Caspases are counter-regulated by multiple anti-apoptotic molecules, and the expression of the latter in leukocytes is largely dependent on...
Spironolactone (SPIR) has been described to suppress accumulation of pro-inflammatory cytokines. Here, the suppression of TNF-alpha in lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-stimulated mononuclear cell cultures was confirmed. However, SPIR was also found to induce apoptosis, prompting the investigations of a possible association between the two effects: The apoptosis-inducing and the cytokine-suppressive effects...
Aims/hypothesis: It is well established that long-term exposure of isolated β cells to cytokines [e.g., IL-1β] results in increased expression of inducible nitric oxide synthase and subsequent release of nitric oxide, which in turn, has been shown to mediate a wide array of effects, including alterations in cellular high-energy metabolism. In this context, several extant studies have demonstrated...
In fatal Ebola virus hemorrhagic fever massive intravascular apoptosis develops rapidly following infection and progressing relentlessly until death. While data suggest that T lymphocytes are mainly deleted by apoptosis in PBMC of human fatal cases, experimental Ebola infection in animal models have shown some evidence of destruction of lymphocytes in spleen and lymph nodes probably involving both...
Intimal cell death has been a recognized feature of advanced atherosclerotic disease. With the advent of DNAin situend labelling and/or ultrastructural techniques, recent findings suggest that cells of an atheroma undergo programmed cell death or apoptosis. The pathophysiologic relevance of apoptosis in atherosclerotic disease is debatable. Apoptotic cell death may influence lesion progression and thus reduce overall plaque burden. Alternatively, apoptosis may prove a means of quenching the inflammation, converting cellular-rich lesions to so-called ‘stable’ fibrous hypocellular plaques or conversely weaken the fibrous cap causing plaque rupture, a major cause of acute coronary syndromes. Apoptotic cells within plaques are typically macrophages, smooth muscle cells and T-cells and the frequency of death varies in the different regions of the lesion. The precise signalling pathways of apoptosis in plaques are unknown. There is however, some evidence that production of immune cytokines may promote apoptosis through activation of the Fas ligand-mediated death pathway. Genetic signals that regulate apoptosis in the atheroma, at least in smooth muscle cells, may involve the tumour suppressor genes p105...
The immunological rejection of the AK-5 histiocytoma in syngeneic hosts involves the participation of NK cells and the upregulation of Th1 type cytokine response. The tumor cells are killed by necrosis and apoptosis. We have studied the role of host peritoneal macrophages in tumor regression. Activated macrophages from tumor- bearing animals produce cytokines like IL-1β, TNF-α, IL-12 and free radicals...
Multicellular tumour spheroids (MCTS) are three-dimensional cell culture systems which are widely used in cancer research. They are characterized by an outer zone of proliferating cells, an inner region of differentiating quiescent cells and an area of so-called necrotic cell death in their centre. The exact cause of this cell death, a controversy for many years, was the aim of the present study....
We have shown that nitric oxide treatment for 30–90 min causes inhibition of insulin secretion, DNA damage and disturbs sub-cellular organization in rat and human islets of Langerhans and HIT-T15 cells. Here rat islets and beta-cell lines were treated with various free radical generating systems S-nitrosoglutathione (nitric oxide), xanthine oxidase plus hypoxanthine (reactive oxygen species), 3-morpholinosydnonimine...
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