Leukotrienes in brain: natural occurrence and induced changes.
Journal: 1991/December - Brain Research
ISSN: 0006-8993
PUBMED: 1933275
Abstract:
Peptidoleukotrienes (SP-LTs) (both total product and individual LTC4 and LTE4 and LTB4 were measured by radioimmunoassay in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) collected from the third ventricle of conscious cats. Total SP-LT was expressed as LTE4 after treating samples with crude gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase. Prostaglandin (PG) E2 and thromboxane (TX) B2, the stable metabolite of TXA2, were also assayed in part of the experiments. Under basal conditions, SP-LT and LTC4 were consistently measurable (respectively, 327 +/- 14 and 244 +/- 41 pg/ml), while native LTE4 was below the threshold of the assay (60-280 pg/ml) in most cases. LTB4 was barely detectable (30 +/- 2 pg/ml) or not detectable at all. PGE2 was normally less abundant than TXB2 (31 +/- 4 vs 281 +/- 47 pg/ml). Intracerebroventricular (i.c.v.) administration of arachidonic acid (40 microgram) caused a 4-fold increase in SP-LT levels which was relatively small and transient compared to PGE2 (76-fold) and TXB2 (23-fold), while there was no change in either native LTE4 or LTB4. A similar response was obtained with platelet-activating factor (PAF, 1 microgram i.c.v.), though SP-LT elevation (4-fold) was more persistent. A further rise in SP-LT (9-fold) was noted when PAF administration was preceded by indomethacin (500 microgram i.c.v.), whereas PAF effect was reversed by pretreatment with either the PAF antagonist, BN52021 (1 microgram i.c.v.), or the 5-lipoxygenase inhibitors, U-60,257 (75 micrograms i.c.v.) and L-651,392 (10 mg/kg p.o.). PAF was also effective in causing a 3-fold rise in LTC4. Unlike PAF, pyrogens (endotoxin i.c.v. or i.v.; interleukin-1 i.v.) at doses above threshold for fever had no effect on LT levels in CSF, both in the absence and presence of indomethacin pretreatment. We conclude that SP-LTs are a normal constituent of CSF, LTC4, being the major species. The response to PAF accords with a pathogenetic role of the compounds in inflammatory processes and the reactive changes to injury. No evidence was obtained for the involvement of SP-LTs in the central mechanism of fever.
Relations:
Citations
(4)
Drugs
(1)
Chemicals
(8)
Organisms
(2)
Processes
(1)
Anatomy
(1)
Affiliates
(1)
Similar articles
Articles by the same authors
Discussion board
Collaboration tool especially designed for Life Science professionals.Drag-and-drop any entity to your messages.