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Effects of Sphingosine and Sphingosine Analogues on the Free Radical Production by Stimulated Neutrophils: ESR and Chemiluminescence Studies

Overview
Publisher Wiley
Specialties Biochemistry
Pathology
Date 1997 Jan 1
PMID 18472867
Citations 3
Authors
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Abstract

Sphingolipids inhibit the activation of the neutrophil (PMN) NADPH oxidase by protein kinase C pathway. By electron spin resonance spectroscopy (ESR) and chemiluminescence (CL), we studied the effects of sphingosine (SPN) and ceramide analogues on phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA, 5x10(-7) M) stimulated PMN (6x10(6) cells). By ESR with spin trapping (100 mM DMPO: 5,5-dimethyl-1-pyrroline-Noxide), we showed that SPN (5 to 8x10(-6) M), C2-ceramide (N-acetyl SPN) and C6-ceramide (N-hexanoyl SPN) at the final concentration of 2x10(-5) and 2x10(-4) M inhibit the production of free radicals by stimulated PMN. The ESR spectrum of stimulated PMN was that of DMPO-superoxide anion spin adduct. Inhibition by 5x10(-6) M SPN was equivalent to that of 30 U/ml SOD. SPN (5 to 8x10(-6) M) has no effect on in vitro systems generating superoxide anion (xanthine 50 mM/xanthine oxidase 110 mU/ml) or hydroxyl radical (Fenton reaction: 88 mM H2O2, 0.01 mM Fe2+ and 0.01 mM EDTA). SPN and N-acetyl SPN also inhibited the CL of PMA stimulated PMN in a dose dependent manner (from 2x10(-6) to 10(-5) M), but N-hexanoyl SPN was less active (from 2x10(-5) to 2x10(-4) M). These effects were compared with those of known PMN inhibitors, superoxide dismutase, catalase and azide. SPN was a better inhibitor compared with these agents. The complete inhibition by SPN of ESR signal and CL of stimulated PMN confirms that this compound or one of its metabolites act at the level of NADPH-oxidase, the key enzyme responsible for production of oxygen-derived free radicals.

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