Oxidant-injured airway epithelial cells upregulate thioredoxin but do not produce interleukin-8.
Am J Respir Cell Mol Biol
; 30(5): 597-604, 2004 May.
Article
en En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-15096327
We tested the hypothesis that oxidant-injured cells upregulate thioredoxin, whereas oxidant-stressed, but not injured, cells upregulate interleukin (IL)-8 after injury. We exposed primary human tracheobronchial epithelial cells and transformed human bronchial epithelial cells (BEAS-2B S.6) to 0, 200, 400, or 600 microM H(2)O(2) for 1 h followed by an additional 7 h of incubation. Subsequently, the cells were double-labeled with markers of injury (either Ethidium Homodimer-1 for cellular injury or MitoTracker dye for functional mitochondria) or oxidant stress (5-[and 6]-chloromethyl-2',7'-dicholorodihydrofluorescein diacetate) and antibodies specific for the chemoattractants IL-8 or thioredoxin. We found significant inverse relationships between numbers and stained chemoattractant volumes of IL-8 and thioredoxin-positive cells with increasing H(2)O(2) dose. Cells with mitochondrial injury produced thioredoxin but not IL-8, and oxidant-stressed cells were more likely to produce thioredoxin than IL-8. Isolated human neutrophils were more likely to colocalize with thioredoxin-positive BEAS-2B S.6 cells than thioredoxin-negative cells. The H(2)O(2) injury did not induce significant apoptosis in the BEAS-2B S.6 cells as measured by caspase 3 activation. We conclude that oxidant-injured and stressed airway epithelial cells upregulate thioredoxin, but produce little IL-8, which may be important in airway epithelial cell-mediated multistep navigation of neutrophils to sites of oxidant injury.
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Banco de datos:
MEDLINE
Asunto principal:
Tiorredoxinas
/
Regulación hacia Arriba
/
Interleucina-8
/
Oxidantes
/
Mucosa Respiratoria
/
Células Epiteliales
Límite:
Humans
Idioma:
En
Año:
2004
Tipo del documento:
Article