Bacterial infection induces nitric oxide synthase in human neutrophils. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • The identification of human inflammatory cells that express inducible nitric oxide synthase and the clarification of the role of inducible nitric oxide synthase in human infectious or inflammatory processes have been elusive. In neutrophil-enriched fractions from urine, we demonstrate a 43-fold increase in nitric oxide synthase activity in patients with urinary tract infections compared with that in neutrophil-enriched fractions from noninfected controls. Partially purified inducible nitric oxide synthase is primarily membrane associated, calcium independent, and inhibited by arginine analogues with a rank order consistent with that of purified human inducible nitric oxide synthase. Molecular, biochemical, and immunocytochemical evidence unequivocally identifies inducible nitric oxide synthase as the major nitric oxide synthase isoform found in neutrophils isolated from urine during urinary tract infections. Elevated inducible nitric oxide synthase activity and elevated nitric oxide synthase protein measured in patients with urinary tract infections and treated with antibiotics does not decrease until 6-10 d of antibiotic treatment. The extended elevation of neutrophil inducible nitric oxide synthase during urinary tract infections may have both antimicrobial and proinflammatory functions.

publication date

  • January 1, 1997

Research

keywords

  • Bacterial Infections
  • Neutrophils
  • Nitric Oxide Synthase
  • Urinary Tract Infections

Identity

PubMed Central ID

  • PMC507774

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 0031038025

PubMed ID

  • 9011564

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 99

issue

  • 1