| Literature DB >> 26701099 |
Iiro Taneli Helenius1, Aisha Nair2, Humberto E Trejo Bittar2, Jacob I Sznajder2, Peter H S Sporn3, Greg J Beitel4.
Abstract
Patients with severe lung disease may develop hypercapnia, elevation of the levels of CO2 in the lungs and blood, which is associated with increased risk of death, often from infection. To identify compounds that ameliorate the adverse effects of hypercapnia, we performed a focused screen of 8832 compounds using a CO2-responsive luciferase reporter in Drosophila S2* cells. We found that evoxine, a plant alkaloid, counteracts the CO2-induced transcriptional suppression of antimicrobial peptides in S2* cells. Strikingly, evoxine also inhibits hypercapnic suppression of interleukin-6 and the chemokine CCL2 expression in human THP-1 macrophages. Evoxine's effects are selective, since it does not prevent hypercapnic inhibition of phagocytosis by THP-1 cells or CO2-induced activation of AMPK in rat ATII pulmonary epithelial cells. The results suggest that hypercapnia suppresses innate immune gene expression by definable pathways that are evolutionarily conserved and demonstrate for the first time that specific CO2 effects can be targeted pharmacologically.Entities:
Keywords: anti-infective drugs; cell-based assays; immune system diseases; reporter gene assays
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26701099 PMCID: PMC5096368 DOI: 10.1177/1087057115624091
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biomol Screen ISSN: 1087-0571