Time for primary review: 30 days Aims Dipeptidyl peptidase-4 (DPP-4) inhibitors are a novel class of drugs for the treatment of hyperglycaemia. Preliminary evidence suggests that their antioxidant and anti-inflammatory effects may have beneficial effects on the cardiovascular complications of diabetes. In the present study, we investigate in an experimental sepsis model whether linagliptin exerts pleiotropic vascular effects independent of its glucose-lowering properties. Methods and results Linagliptin (83 mg/kg chow for 7days) was administered in a rat model of lipopolysaccharide (LPS) (10 mg/kg, single i.p. dose/24 h)-induced sepsis. Vascular relaxation, reactive oxygen species (ROS) formation, expression of NADPH oxidase subunits and proinflammatory markers, and white blood cell infiltration in the vasculature were determined. Oxidative burst and adhesion of isolated human neutrophils to endothelial cells were measured in the presence of different DPP-4 inhibitors, and their direct vasodilatory effects (isometric tension in isolated aortic rings) were compared. In vivo linagliptin treatment ameliorated LPS-induced endothelial dysfunction and was associated with reduced formation of vascular, cardiac, and blood ROS, aortic expression of inflammatory genes and NADPH oxidase subunits in addition to reduced aortic infiltration with inflammatory cells. Linagliptin was the most potent inhibitor of oxidative burst in isolated activated human neutrophils and it suppressed their adhesion to activated endothelial cells. Of the inhibitors tested, linagliptin and alogliptin had the most pronounced direct vasodilatory potency. Conclusion Linagliptin demonstrated pleiotropic vasodilatory, antioxidant, and anti-inflammatory properties independent of its glucose-lowering properties. These pleiotropic properties are generally not shared by other DPP-4 inhibitors and might translate into cardiovascular benefits in diabetic patients.
IntroductionThe most widely used protocol for the induction of experimental allergic airway inflammation in mice involves sensitization by intraperitoneal (i.p.) injections of the antigen ovalbumin (OVA) used in conjunction with the adjuvant aluminium hydroxide (alum). Although adjuvants are frequently used, there are questions regarding the necessity of alum for murine asthma studies due to the non-physiological nature of this chemical.ObjectiveThe objective of this study was to compare experimental asthma phenotypes between adjuvant and adjuvant-free protocols of murine allergic airway inflammation in an attempt to develop a standardized alternative to adjuvant use.MethodAn adjuvant-free OVA model of experimental asthma was investigated in BALB/c mice using i.p. or subcutaneous (s.c.) sensitization routes. For the s.c. sensitization, β-galactosidase (β-gal) was also tested as an antigen. In addition, OVA adjuvant and adjuvant-free sensitization protocols were compared in BALB/c and C57BL/6 mice. Open-field testing was performed to assess the effect of alum on mouse behaviour.ResultsComparison of adjuvant vs. adjuvant-free and i.p. vs. s.c. protocols revealed that both adjuvant use and route of antigen application significantly influenced OVA-specific antibody production. Comparison of adjuvant and adjuvant-free protocols in this study clearly demonstrated the non-requirement of alum for the induction of acute allergic airway inflammation, as both protocols induce a similar disease phenotype. BALB/c mice were significantly more susceptible than C57BL/6 mice to sensitization. Using the improved s.c. adjuvant-free protocol, it was demonstrated that alternative antigens such as β-gal can also be utilized. Behavioural studies indicated severe distress in mice treated with alum.ConclusionThe OVA s.c. adjuvant-free protocol used in this study generates a phenotype comparable to the benchmark adjuvant protocol widely used in the literature. The adjuvant-free alternative avoids the added complication of non-physiological adjuvants that may interfere with asthma treatment or prevention strategies.
Dipeptidyl peptidase (DPP)-4 inhibitors are used to treat hyperglycemia by increasing the incretin glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1). Previous studies showed anti-inflammatory and antiatherosclerotic effects of DPP-4 inhibitors. Here, we compared the effects of linagliptin versus sitagliptin and liraglutide on survival and vascular function in animal models of endotoxic shock by prophylactic therapy and treatment after lipopolysaccharide (LPS) injection. Gliptins were administered either orally or subcutaneously: linagliptin (5 mg/kg/day), sitagliptin (50 mg/kg/day) or liraglutide (200 µg/kg/day). Endotoxic shock was induced by LPS injection (mice 17.5-20 mg/kg i.p., rats 10 mg/kg/day). Linagliptin and liraglutide treatment or DPP-4 knockout improved the survival of endotoxemic mice, while sitagliptin was ineffective. Linagliptin, liraglutide and sitagliptin ameliorated LPS-induced hypotension and vascular dysfunction in endotoxemic rats, suppressed inflammatory parameters such as whole blood nitrosyl-iron hemoglobin (leukocyte-inducible nitric oxide synthase activity) or aortic mRNA expression of markers of inflammation as well as whole blood and aortic reactive oxygen species formation. Hemostasis (tail bleeding time, activated partial thromboplastin time) was impaired in endotoxemic rats and recovered under cotreatment with linagliptin and liraglutide. Finally, the beneficial effects of linagliptin on vascular function and inflammatory parameters in endotoxemic mice were impaired in AMP-activated kinase (alpha1) knockout mice. The improved survival of endotoxemic animals and other data shown here may warrant further clinical evaluation of these drugs in patients with septic shock beyond the potential improvement of inflammatory complications in diabetic individuals with special emphasis on the role of AMP-activated kinase (alpha1) in the DPP-4/GLP-1 cascade.
Cutaneous dendritic cells (DC) are pivotal for the elicitation of antigen-specific immune responses following gene gun-mediated biolistic transfection of the skin. We transcriptionally targeted transgene expression to DC using vectors containing the murine fascin promoter (pFascin) to control antigen production and compared the immune response elicited with conventional DNA immunization using plasmid constructs with the ubiquitously active CMV promoter (pCMV). Biolistic transfection with pFascin initiated a marked type 1 immune response characterized by the occurrence of a large population of IFN-gamma-producing T helper (Th) cells in spleen and draining lymph nodes. Consistently, immunoglobulin production was dominated by IgG2a antibodies. In contrast, the humoral response after repeated administration of pCMV was strongly enhanced and characterized by a type 2-like isotype pattern (IgG1 > IgG2a). Cytokine production analysis in vitro indicated compartmentalization of the immune response, revealing large numbers of IL-4-producing Th cells in the lymph nodes and dominant presence of IFN-gamma-producing Th cells in the spleen. Biolistic transfection with pFascin, like immunization with pCMV, led to potent induction of cytotoxic T cells as was assessed by JAM test. Thus gene gun immunization with plasmids that focus transgene expression and antigen production specifically to DC propagates type 1-biased cellular immune responses.
Strong cell-type-specific promoters are basic tools in gene therapy allowing for novel applications and focused strategies by transcriptionally targeting gene expression to selected cells. In immunotherapy, dendritic cells (DC) are of central importance, since they represent the principal inducers of immune responses. Here we describe isolation and use of the promoter of the murine actin-bundling protein fascin to target transcriptionally gene expression to cutaneous DC. Using the reporter gene enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP), we demonstrate that the fascin promoter mediates a strong antigen expression that is restricted to mature DC. DNA vaccination with antigenencoding expression vectors under control of the fascin promoter using a gene gun resulted, consistently, in limited antigen expression by few directly transfected DC. Nevertheless, nearly as many antigen-specific CD8 + T cells directed against the encoded antigens EGFP and bgalactosidase, respectively, were induced as with expression constructs under control of the ubiquitously expressed CMV promoter. This result impressively underlines the pivotal role of directly transfected DC in DNA vaccination. Immunization using the fascin promoter induced markedly lower levels of antigen-specific antibodies following single or repeated immunization. Thus, our DC-targeted DNA vaccination approach induces qualitatively distinct, predominantly cellular immune responses and provides new opportunities for immunotherapy.
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