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Vol. 285, Issue 3, 1233-1238, June 1998
-1-Proteinase Inhibitor Inactivation by Neutrophils: Therapeutic
Implications1
Department of Pharmacology, Faculty of Medicine, University of
Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada M5S 1A8 (A.D.R., Y.I.) and
Department
of Pathology, Anatomy and Cell Biology, Thomas Jefferson University,
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (A.D.R., I.D., N.J., Y.I.)
The release of proteolytic enzymes and generation of strong oxidants
such as the hydroxyl radical by activated neutrophils has been proposed
to play an important role in mediating toxin-induced liver injury. The
antithyroid drug propylthiouracil protects against liver injury induced
by many hepatotoxic agents and markedly reduces mortality in patients
with alcoholic liver disease. However, the mechanism(s) by which
propylthiouracil protects against liver injury is not well understood.
The present studies investigate the effect of antithyroid drugs on
proteolytic enzyme activity and on hydroxyl radical generation from
activated neutrophils. In the presence of hydrogen peroxide and
chloride, neutrophil myeloperoxidase, an enzyme from the same gene
superfamily as thyroid peroxidase, generates hypochlorous acid which
inactivates
-1-proteinase inhibitor (A1PI) present in serum. This
inactivation allows neutrophil-released proteolytic enzymes to attack
cells. In the present study myeloperoxidase activity was inhibited
fully at therapeutic concentrations by antithyroid drugs
(propylthiouracil and methimazole). Antithyroid drugs fully prevented
hypochlorous acid formation, and prevented neutrophil-mediated
inactivation of A1PI, with concomitant blockage of proteolytic
activity. Conversely, generation of both superoxide and hydroxyl
radicals by activated neutrophils was unaffected by propylthiouracil.
The production of these oxygen radicals was fully inhibited by the
NADPH oxidase inhibitor diphenylene iodonium chloride, however. These
studies indicate that antithyroid drugs are unlikely to prevent cell
injury by inhibiting hydroxyl radical generation or by scavenging
hydroxyl radicals, but are likely to exert their hepatoprotective
anti-inflammatory action by inhibiting neutrophil myeloperoxidase, an
enzyme akin to thyroid peroxidase.
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