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Publication : Nitric oxide and the Th2 response combine to prevent severe hepatic damage during Schistosoma mansoni infection.

First Author  Brunet LR Year  1999
Journal  J Immunol Volume  163
Issue  9 Pages  4976-84
PubMed ID  10528202 Mgi Jnum  J:78700
Mgi Id  MGI:2385917 Doi  10.4049/jimmunol.163.9.4976
Citation  Brunet LR, et al. (1999) Nitric oxide and the Th2 response combine to prevent severe hepatic damage during Schistosoma mansoni infection. J Immunol 163(9):4976-84
abstractText  During infection with Schistosoma mansoni, NO production increases following the deposition of parasite eggs in the liver. In wild-type C57BL/6 mice, NO levels peak during the sixth week of infection and are subsequently down-regulated. Inducible NO synthase (iNOS) mRNA was found in diseased liver tissue along with TNF-alpha and IFN-gamma, which are known promoters of iNOS expression. Mice treated with aminoguanidine, a selective inhibitor of iNOS, exhibited cachexia and exacerbated liver pathology, suggesting that NO limits hepatocyte damage when the liver is first exposed to eggs. Hepatic iNOS is up-regulated in SCID mice, indicating that NO production is part of an innate response. Studies with infected highly susceptible IL-4-/- mice revealed that prolonged NO production is in itself deleterious and that a major function of the Th2 response, which is severely compromised in the absence of IL-4, is to regulate NO production. In these animals, plasma NO levels are high compared with those in infected wild-type mice and remain elevated until death. Nevertheless, the underlying importance of NO is illustrated by the finding that aminoguanidine treatment leads to more severe liver disease and reduced time to death in infected IL-4-/- mice.
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