Literature DB >> 17656650

Mechanism of estrogen-mediated attenuation of hepatic injury following trauma-hemorrhage: Akt-dependent HO-1 up-regulation.

Jun-Te Hsu1, Wen-Hong Kan, Chi-Hsun Hsieh, Mashkoor A Choudhry, Martin G Schwacha, Kirby I Bland, Irshad H Chaudry.   

Abstract

Protein kinase B (Akt) is known to be involved in proinflammatory and chemotactic events in response to injury. Akt activation also leads to the induction of heme oxygenase (HO)-1. Up-regulation of HO-1 mediates potent, anti-inflammatory effects and attenuates organ injury. Although studies have shown that 17beta-estradiol (E2) prevents organ damage following trauma-hemorrhage, it remains unknown whether Akt/HO-1 plays any role in E2-mediated attenuation of hepatic injury following trauma-hemorrhage. To study this, male rats underwent trauma-hemorrhage (mean blood pressure, approximately 40 mmHg for 90 min), followed by fluid resuscitation. At the onset of resuscitation, rats were treated with vehicle, E2 (1 mg/kg body weight), E2 plus the PI-3K inhibitor (Wortmannin), or the estrogen receptor (ER) antagonist (ICI 182,780). At 2 h after sham operation or trauma-hemorrhage, plasma alpha-GST and hepatic tissue myeloperoxidase (MPO) activity, IL-6, TNF-alpha, ICAM-1, cytokine-induced neutrophil chemoattractant-1, and MIP-2 levels were measured. Hepatic Akt and HO-1 protein levels were also determined. Trauma-hemorrhage increased hepatic injury markers (alpha-GST and MPO activity), cytokines, ICAM-1, and chemokine levels. These parameters were markedly improved in the E2-treated rats following trauma-hemorrhage. E2 treatment also increased hepatic Akt activation and HO-1 expression compared with vehicle-treated, trauma-hemorrhage rats, which were abolished by coadministration of Wortmannin or ICI 182,780. These results suggest that the salutary effects of E2 on hepatic injury following trauma-hemorrhage are in part mediated via an ER-related, Akt-dependent up-regulation of HO-1.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17656650     DOI: 10.1189/jlb.0607355

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Leukoc Biol        ISSN: 0741-5400            Impact factor:   4.962


  24 in total

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3.  Activation of endoplasmic reticulum stress response following trauma-hemorrhage.

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Journal:  Biochim Biophys Acta       Date:  2008-08-28

4.  17β-Estradiol attenuates hypoxic pulmonary hypertension via estrogen receptor-mediated effects.

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6.  A nonerythropoietic peptide that mimics the 3D structure of erythropoietin reduces organ injury/dysfunction and inflammation in experimental hemorrhagic shock.

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8.  Mechanism of the salutary effects of estrogen on kupffer cell phagocytic capacity following trauma-hemorrhage: pivotal role of Akt activation.

Authors:  Chi-Hsun Hsieh; Eike A Nickel; Jianguo Chen; Martin G Schwacha; Mashkoor A Choudhry; Kirby I Bland; Irshad H Chaudry
Journal:  J Immunol       Date:  2009-04-01       Impact factor: 5.422

9.  Flutamide protects against trauma-hemorrhage-induced liver injury via attenuation of the inflammatory response, oxidative stress, and apopotosis.

Authors:  Wen-Hong Kan; Chi-Hsun Hsieh; Martin G Schwacha; Mashkoor A Choudhry; Raghavan Raju; Kirby I Bland; Irshad H Chaudry
Journal:  J Appl Physiol (1985)       Date:  2008-06-05

10.  Trauma-hemorrhage and hypoxia differentially influence kupffer cell phagocytic capacity: role of hypoxia-inducible-factor-1alpha and phosphoinositide 3-kinase/Akt activation.

Authors:  Chi-Hsun Hsieh; Eike A Nickel; Jun-Te Hsu; Martin G Schwacha; Kirby I Bland; Irshad H Chaudry
Journal:  Ann Surg       Date:  2009-12       Impact factor: 12.969

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