The mechanism underlying the differentiation of CD4+ T cells into functionally distinct subsets (Th1 and Th2) is incompletely understood, and hitherto unidentified cytokines may be required for the functional maturation of these cells. Here we report the cloning of a recently identified IFN-gamma-inducing factor (IGIF) that augments natural killer (NK) activity in spleen cells. The gene encodes a precursor protein of 192 amino acids and a mature protein of 157 amino acids, which have no obvious similarities to any peptide in the databases. Messenger RNAs for IGIF and interleukin-12 (IL-12) are readily detected in Kupffer cells and activated macrophages. Recombinant IGIF induces IFN-gamma more potently than does IL-12, apparently through a separate pathway. Administration of anti-IGIF antibodies prevents liver damage in mice inoculated with Propionibacterium acnes and challenged with lipopolysaccharide, which induces toxic shock. IGIF may be involved in the development of Th1 cells and also in mechanisms of tissue injury in inflammatory reactions.
Enhancement of cerebral blood flow by hypoxia is critical for brain function, but signaling systems underlying its regulation have been unclear. We report a pathway mediating hypoxia-induced cerebral vasodilation in studies monitoring vascular disposition in cerebellar slices and in intact mouse brains using two-photon intravital laser scanning microscopy. In this cascade, hypoxia elicits cerebral vasodilation via the coordinate actions of H 2 S formed by cystathionine β-synthase (CBS) and CO generated by heme oxygenase (HO)-2. Hypoxia diminishes CO generation by HO-2, an oxygen sensor. The constitutive CO physiologically inhibits CBS, and hypoxia leads to increased levels of H 2 S that mediate the vasodilation of precapillary arterioles. Mice with targeted deletion of HO-2 or CBS display impaired vascular responses to hypoxia. Thus, in intact adult brain cerebral cortex of HO-2-null mice, imaging mass spectrometry reveals an impaired ability to maintain ATP levels on hypoxia.gas biology | neurovascular unit | energy metabolism | gasotransmitter T he cerebral circulation is maintained by autoregulation, which prevents marked alterations in response to changes in blood pressure, whereas functional hyperemia links blood flow to neural activity (1). Blood flow regulation in the brain is modulated by O 2 (2), with increased cerebral blood flow in response to hypoxia critical for protecting the brain against diverse insults. Such regulation also participates in functional hyperemia, as demonstrated by functional MRI investigations indicating a transient decrease in O 2 levels preceding activation of blood flow in response to neuronal firing (3).Alterations in cerebral blood flow in response to hypoxia and neural activity are mediated via several neurotransmitter systems, with prominent involvement of the gaseous mediator nitric oxide (NO) (1, 2). In response to glutamate acting on NMDA receptors, neuronal NO synthase (nNOS) is activated by increases in intracellular calcium, with the generated NO stimulating soluble guanylyl cyclase, thereby increasing cGMP levels to dilate blood vessels (4). Functional hyperemia is decreased by ∼50% in rats in response to inhibition of nNOS (5). Another gaseous mediator, CO (6-8), is also vasoactive. In some blood vessel systems (e.g., liver sinusoids), CO causes vasodilation, and inhibition of its biosynthetic enzyme HO-2 leads to vasoconstriction (9-13). However, in the cerebral circulation, CO elicits vasoconstriction. Thus, HO inhibitors cause cerebral vasodilation, an effect reversed by CO (14). This action of CO cannot be readily explained by previously identified CO receptors, such as soluble guanylyl cyclase (6-12, 15) or potassium channels (13, 16), both of which mediate vasodilation. The CO and NO systems interface; thus, the vasodilatory actions of HO inhibitors are partially reversed by inhibitors of NOS (14). A third gaseous mediator, H 2 S, is also vasoactive, eliciting vasodilation in both the peripheral and cerebral circulation (17-21). H 2 S can be physiologically ...
Local responses of energy metabolism during brain ischemia are too heterogeneous to decipher redox distribution between anoxic core and adjacent salvageable regions such as penumbra. Imaging mass spectrometry combined by capillary electrophoresis=mass spectrometry providing quantitative metabolomics revealed spatiotemporal changes in adenylates and NADH in a mouse middle-cerebral artery occlusion model. Unlike the core where ATP decreased, the penumbra displayed paradoxical elevation of ATP despite the constrained blood supply. It is noteworthy that the NADH elevation in the ischemic region is clearly demarcated by the ATPdepleting core. Results suggest that metabolism in ischemic penumbra does not respond passively to compromised circulation, but actively compensates energy charges. Antioxid. Redox Signal. 13, 1157-1167. Quantitative Imaging Mass Spectrometry as a Novel Tactics to Decipher Metabolic Dynamics of Brain IschemiaT o develop neuroprotective therapies for cerebrovascular diseases, it is necessary to characterize spatiotemporal changes in energy metabolism occurring at two functionally defined areas of ischemic brain: one is the ischemic core, which is unsalvageable, and another is its adjacent zone termed penumbra, which is salvageable by interventions. Such characterization requires technical breakthrough including simultaneous identification of multiple compounds comprising energy metabolic systems and quantitative analytical methods sensitive enough to detect low levels of metabolites in the heterogeneous regions of ischemic brain. To achieve these requirements, we combined two types of mass spectrometry (MS): matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization (MALDI)=MS and capillary electrophoresis=electrospray ionization (CE=ESI)=MS. Unlike conventional spectroscopic techniques with which chemical profiles are obtained from one selected volume at a time, MALDI=MS has strengths in visualizing multiple metabolites in discrete areas with a single laser ablation (10, 26, 32). However, it still requires further efforts to be supported for quantification. By contrast, CE=ESI=MS excels in quantification of metabolites (15,22,23) because ESI is efficient in transferring molecules from liquid phase to gas phase. Comparison of transcriptional expression profiles with CE=ESI= MS-based metabolomics previously led us to hypothesize the existence of novel metabolic pathways (33) and their regulatory mechanisms (15,22,23). However, it removes spatial distribution of molecules due to tissue homogenization to extract metabolites.Using imaging MS (IMS) combined with CE=ESI=MS, we herein constructed maps of adenine nucleotides whereby abundance of these metabolites was assigned in absolute terms, that is, mmol=g tissue. Such assignment of contents made it possible to directly compare patterns of biochemical derangements in and around the ischemic core at different time points during infarction. Our results suggest that, unlike the core, the penumbra displays paradoxical elevation of ATP despite the constrained b...
Nutritional status potentially influences immune responses; however, how nutritional signals regulate cellular dynamics and functionality remains obscure. Herein, we report that temporary fasting drastically reduces the number of lymphocytes by $50% in Peyer's patches (PPs), the inductive site of the gut immune response. Subsequent refeeding seemingly restored the number of lymphocytes, but whose cellular composition was conspicuously altered. A large portion of germinal center and IgA + B cells were lost via apoptosis during fasting. Meanwhile, naive B cells migrated from PPs to the bone marrow during fasting and then back to PPs during refeeding when stromal cells sensed nutritional signals and upregulated CXCL13 expression to recruit naive B cells. Furthermore, temporal fasting before oral immunization with ovalbumin abolished the induction of antigen-specific IgA, failed to induce oral tolerance, and eventually exacerbated food antigen-induced diarrhea. Thus, nutritional signals are critical in maintaining gut immune homeostasis.
Glucose transport enhancers were searched for in Lagerstroemia speciosa, a Philippine local herbal medicine used for diabetes mellitus. Bioassay-guided fractionation of the aqueous acetone extract of the leaves afforded three active ellagitannins, lagerstroemin, flosin B and reginin A, identified by NMR and optical rotation. These compounds increased glucose uptake of rat adipocytes, and could be responsible for lowering the blood glucose level.
Secretory immunoglobulin A (SIgA), the most abundant antibody isotype in the body, maintains a mutual relationship with commensal bacteria and acts as a primary barrier at the mucosal surface. Colonization by commensal bacteria induces an IgA response, at least partly through a T-cell-independent process. However, the mechanism underlying the commensal-bacteria-induced T-cell-independent IgA response has yet to be fully clarified. Here, we show that commensal-bacteria-derived butyrate promotes T-cell-independent IgA class switching recombination (CSR) in the mouse colon. Notably, the butyrate concentration in human stools correlated positively with the amount of IgA. Butyrate up-regulated the production of transforming growth factor β1 and all-trans retinoic acid by CD103+CD11b+ dendritic cells, both of which are critical for T-cell-independent IgA CSR. This effect was mediated by G-protein-coupled receptor 41 (GPR41/FFA3) and GPR109a/HCA2, and the inhibition of histone deacetylase. The butyrate-induced IgA response reinforced the colonic barrier function, preventing systemic bacterial dissemination under inflammatory conditions. These observations demonstrate that commensal-bacteria-derived butyrate contributes to the maintenance of the gut immune homeostasis by facilitating the T-cell-independent IgA response in the colon.
Tolvaptan, a selective vasopressin V 2 receptor antagonist, slows the increase in total kidney volume and the decline in kidney function in patients with the results of the Tolvaptan Efficacy and Safety in Management of Autosomal Dominant Polycystic Kidney Disease and Outcome (TEMPO) 3:4 trial. However, it was unclear which dose of tolvaptan was optimal or whether tolvaptan was able to delay progression to end-stage renal disease (ESRD). Here we examined the relationship with aquaresis and the inhibitory effect on cyst development in short-term treatment and mortality as an index of ESRD in long-term treatment with tolvaptan using DBA/2FG-pcy mice, an animal model of nephronophthisis. With short-term treatment from 5 to 15 weeks of age, tolvaptan (0.01-0.3% via diet) dose-dependently enhanced aquaresis, prevented increases in kidney weight and cyst volume, and was associated with significant reductions in kidney cAMP levels and extracellular signal-regulated kinase activity. Maximal effects of tolvaptan on aquaresis and the prevention of development of polycystic kidney disease (PKD) were obtained at 0.1%. Interestingly, tolvaptan also dose-dependently reduced urinary neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin levels in correlation with the kidney volume. With long-term treatment from 5 to 29 weeks of age, tolvaptan significantly attenuated the increase in kidney volume by up to 50% and reduced urinary albumin excretion. Furthermore, tolvaptan significantly reduced the mortality rate to 20%, compared with 60% in the control group. These data indicate that tolvaptan may delay the onset of ESRD in PKD by suppressing the increases in kidney volume and renal injury, providing a promising treatment for PKD.
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