Antileukotrienes in Acute Asthma: Zafirlukast, Montelukast, Leukotriene Receptor Antagonists

Leukotriene Receptor Antagonists
Leukotrienes can be found in the airway and urine following both spontaneous exacerbations of asthma and acute exposure to bronchoconstrictor stimuli in the laboratory. This in turn indicates that they may have a role in the pathogenesis of acute episodes of bronchoconstriction. Although antileukotrienes are not currently advocated in the management of acute asthma, there are data to suggest that they might be of some potential benefit. Prior treatment with montelukast asthma has been shown in several studies to significantly shorten the time taken to recover (in terms of FEV 1 ) following exposure to a bronchoconstrictor stimulus. (more…)

Treg Cells In Allergen-Specific Immunotherapy

treg cells
Treg cells or regulatory T cells constitute a large population of cellular infiltrate in atopic/allergic inflammation and a dysregulated immune response appears to be an important pathogenetic factor. Cardinal events during allergic inflammation can be classified as activation, organ-selective homing, survival and reactivation, and effector functions of immune system cells. T cells are activated by aeroallergens, food antigens, autoantigens, and bacterial exotoxins superantigens in allergic inflammation. They are under the influence of the skin, lung, or nose-related chemokine network and show organ-selective homing. (more…)

Foxp3 Forkhead Winged Transcription Factor & Mechanisms Of Suppression

foxp3
The intracellular forkhead winged transcription factor Foxp3 (forkhead box P3) appears to be specifically expressed by naturally occurring Treg cells, particularly in mice, although in humans there is evidence of upregulation of Foxp3 in all T cells on activation. Foxp3 is required for the development and function of naturally occurring regulatory t cells (treg) and expression is sufficient to convert non-regulatory CD4+CD25T cells into cells with regulatory activity. Conversion of peripheral CD4+CD25 naive T cells to Foxp3+CD4+CD25 foxp3+ Treg cells can be induced by TGF-ß. In a murine asthma model, these TGF-ß-induced Treg prevented house-dust mite-induced allergic pathogenesis or infection pathogenesis in lungs. A single independent report has suggested that IL-4 and IL-13 also induce Foxp3+CD25+ Treg from CD4+CD25precursors. (more…)

CD4 CD25 Foxp3 Regulatory T Cells (Treg) Markers Occurring

regulatory t cells
Regulatory T cells Treg (picture above) is the existence of suppressor cells, which limit ongoing immune responses and prevent autoimmune disease, was postulated over 30 years ago. The recent phenotypic and functional characterization of these cells has led to a resurgence of interest in their therapeutic application in a number of immune-mediated diseases. Two broad subsets of CD3+CD4+ suppressive or Treg cells have been described: constitutive or naturally occurring versus adaptive or inducible Treg. (more…)

Antileukotriene Drugs for Airway Hyperresponsiveness & Asthma Treatment

antileukotriene
A variety of proinflammatory cells, mediators, and cytokines orchestrate the development of airway hyperresponsiveness, which results in the episodic airflow obstruction characteristic of asthma. As a consequence, modulation of the underlying disease process with antii-nflammatory agents is firmly established as being the cornerstone of successful management. Inhaled corticosteroids are the most potent antiinflammatory agents available and satisfactorily suppress underlying airway inflammation in most individuals. (more…)

Mononuclear Phagocytes: The Monocyte Macrophage System

Nearly all tissues, organs, and serosal cavities harbor a population of resident phagocytes. Most contain only a diffuse scattering of individual phagocytic cells that remain inconspicuous under normal conditions and are very similar to one another in appearance and function. In some tissues, however, phagocytes are especially abundant or have distinctive morphologic features and are known by specific names. Examples include the Kupffer cells that line sinusoids of the liver (and account for nearly 10% of total liver mass), osteoclasts in bone, or microglial cells of the brain (Table bellow). (more…)

Peptide Antibiotics and Defensins Amino Acids

peptide antibiotics
Other humoral effectors and humoral factors have the ability to lyse microorganisms directly. The best studied of these are a class of small peptide antibiotics known as defensins, which in their active forms are all roughly 30 amino acids long (3,5 kilodaltons), positively charged, and protease-resistant. Each also has three internal disulfide bonds. They are classified as either α or β defensins based on the arrangement of the disulfides, but both classes have nearly the same compact, folded structure consisting of three strands of antiparallel β-pleated sheets. (more…)

Cytokine Receptors & Signal Transduction

cytokine receptors
The overlapping functions of cytokines largely reflect the properties of the cell surface receptors to which they bind. All cytokine receptors function as multiprotein complexes made up of two or more integral membrane polypeptides, called subunits (Figure 1 bellow). A typical subunit polypeptide has an extracellular domain that participates in cytokine binding, a transmembrane region, and an intracellular domain (also called a cytoplasmic tail gp41) involved in signal transduction the molecular events that transmit signals to the cell interior and induce specific cellular responses when the receptor binds its appropriate cytokine ligand. Some receptors (eg, EPO-R) function as homodimers of a single type of subunit; others (eg, GM-CSFR) function as heterodimers, and still others (eg, IL-2R) as heterotrimers. (more…)

Inflammation Mediators and Vascular Responses to Injury or Infection

inflmmation responses
Some of the immediate sequelae of injury are uncomfortably familiar: Soon after an injury occurs, the affected site and its surrounding tissues become reddened, warm, swollen, and painful. These four signs which are probably the most useful and ubiquitous diagnostic clues in all of clinical medicine are hallmarks of acute inflammation, the body’s initial physiologic reaction to tissue distress. In its simplest form, inflammation is a response carried out by blood vessels and by the endothelial cells that line them. (more…)

The Ras-Dependent Signaling Pathway

ras pathway
The Ras-dependent pathway can be triggered by a variety of cytokine receptors, as well as by certain adhesion molecules and by many other surface receptors when they contact appropriate ligands. Signaling in this pathway can be initiated by cytosolic proteins called Src-family kinases, so named because they bear regions of sequence homology to the oncoprotein Src. These Src-like kinases contain specialized protein domains, termed SH2 domains (for Src-homology region 2), that enable them to bind other proteins containing phosphorylated tyrosine residues. When a cytokine receptor binds ligand, subunits of the receptor become phosphorylated and can immediately be bound by a Src-family kinase. (more…)

Next Page »