| Literature DB >> 20663294 |
G Kocic1, D Sokolovic, T Jevtovic, A Veljkovic, R Kocic, G Nikolic, J Basic, D Stojanovic, A Cencic, S Stojanovic.
Abstract
A high prevalence of various infectious diseases is reported in diabetic patients, which may suggest impaired innate immunity against different pathogen-associated molecular patterns. This study investigated the effects of hyperglycemia, oxidative stress (H(2)O(2)), nitric oxide (NO) and peroxynitrite (ONOO(-)) on the modulation of antiviral (MDA-5, IRF-3 and phospho-IRF-3), inflammatory (NF-kappaB) and pro/anti-apoptotic molecules (Bax and Bcl-2) in BALB/c mice thymocytes. Each of the experimental conditions, except the weakest NO concentration, resulted in down-regulation of MDA-5, IRF-3 and phospho-IRF-3. In contrast, each of the experimental conditions elicited up-regulation of NF-kappaB, Bcl-2 and Bax. These results suggest that hyperglycemia, oxidative and nitrosative stress may contribute to the reduced immunity of the host by altering the MDA-5/IRF-3/phosphoIRF-3 axis, as well as contributing to the mechanisms of inflammatory reaction via increased NF-kappaB, and to augmented turnover rate of thymocyte cells via Bcl2/Bax up-regulation.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 20663294 PMCID: PMC7067329 DOI: 10.1179/174329210X12650506623564
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Redox Rep ISSN: 1351-0002 Impact factor: 4.412