4.7 Article

Cytokine-stimulated nitric oxide production and inducible NO-synthase mRNA level in human intestinal cells: lack of modulation by glutamine

Journal

CLINICAL NUTRITION
Volume 22, Issue 6, Pages 523-528

Publisher

CHURCHILL LIVINGSTONE
DOI: 10.1016/S0261-5614(03)00054-2

Keywords

nitric oxide synthase; intestine; glutamine; human

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Background & aims: Excess NO production has been reported during intestinal inflammation. Modulation of the inflammatory response with nutrients in critically ill patients has gained increasing interest. Glutamine has beneficial effects on gut mucosa but its effects on human intestinal NO production during an inflammatory response are not known. Methods: Caco-2/TC7 and HCT-8 cells were stimulated with a cytokine mixture (IL-1beta, TNFalpha, IFNgamma) and duodenal biopsies from human healthy volunteers in organ culture were stimulated with IL-1beta. All cultures were performed in the presence of 2-10 mmol/l glutamine. NO release in culture supernatant and NOS mRNA level in cultured cells or biopsies were assessed by nitrate reduction and Griess assay and RT-PCR, respectively. Results: In Caco-2, HCT-8 cells and duodenal biopsies, cytokine stimulation increased iNOS mRNA level 1.2-fold (ns), 3.8-fold (P=0.02), 4.7-fold (P=0.03) and NO production 1.4-fold (ns), 91 (P=0.01) and 1.7-fold (P=0.01), respectively. Increasing glutamine concentration had no significant effect on NO production and iNOS mRNA in any type of culture, stimulated or not by cytokines. In various models of human intestinal cells, glutamine does not further increase NO production induced by pro-inflammatory cytokines. (C) 2003 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.

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