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Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology. 1997;17:465-474

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(Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology. 1997;17:465-474.)
© 1997 American Heart Association, Inc.


Articles

Notoginsenoside R1 Counteracts Endotoxin-Induced Activation of Endothelial Cells In Vitro and Endotoxin-Induced Lethality in Mice In Vivo

Wei-Jian Zhang; Johann Wojta; ; Bernd R. Binder

From the Department of Vascular Biology and Thrombosis Research, University of Vienna, Austria (W-J.Z., J.W., B.R.B.), and the Department of Physiology, Beijing University of Traditional Chinese Medicine, PRC (W-J.Z.).

Abstract In this study we investigated a possible counteracting activity of notoginsenoside R1 (NG-R1) on lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-induced effects in vitro and in vivo. The upregulation of plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 (PAI-1) antigen due to LPS (1 µg/mL for 12 hours) in human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs) was prevented when the cells were incubated simultaneously with 100 µg/mL NG-R1 (PAI-1 antigen: LPS-treated cells, 969±54 ng/105 cells; control cells, 370±15 ng/105 cells; LPS+NG-R1–treated cells, 469±29 ng/105 cells; n=6). The 2.5- and 3.4-fold (2.2- and 3.2-kb) increases in PAI-1 mRNA levels induced by LPS (1 µg/mL for 6 hours) were reduced to 1.4- and 2.6-fold increases in the presence of both LPS and 100 µg/mL NG-R1. LPS-induced tissue factor (TF) activity in HUVECs was also counteracted when the cells were coincubated with both LPS and 100 µg/mL NG-R1 for 6 hours (TF activity: LPS-treated cells, 88.6±6.5 mU/106 cells; control cells, 0.7±0.01 mU/106 cells; LPS+NG-R1–treated cells, 56.0±1.9 mU/106 cells). The 26-fold increase in TF mRNA levels induced by LPS (1 µg/mL for 2 hours) was reduced to a 13-fold increase in the presence of both LPS and 100 µg/mL NG-R1. PAI activity levels in the plasma of mice 4 hours after injection of LPS (10 ng/g body wt) increased 2.3-fold compared with a control group. In contrast, PAI activity from LPS+NG-R1 (1 µg/g body wt NG-R1)–treated animals was at control level (PAI-1 activity: LPS-treated group, 11.3±3.1 U/mL; control group, 4.9±0.3 U/mL; LPS+NG-R1–treated group, 4.3±1.0 U/mL; n=5 to 8). The production of TNF-{alpha} induced by 1 µg/mL LPS by cultured human whole-blood cells was inhibited by 46% when the cells were incubated together with 100 µg/mL NG-R1. NG-R1 protected mice from the lethal effects of LPS. The 78% lethality induced by LPS/galactosamine was reduced to 23% when NG-R1 was administered simultaneously (P<.01 by {chi}2 test). To extend this study to inflammatory cells, the effect of NG-R1 on LPS stimulation of the monocytic cell line THP-1 was investigated. NG-R1 inhibited the LPS-induced degradation of I{kappa}B-{alpha} and superinduced LPS-induced I{kappa}B-{alpha} mRNA, indicating that the effect of NG-R1 is not restricted to endothelial cells and is at least in part mediated by interference with the NF-{kappa}B/I{kappa}B-{alpha} pathway.


Key Words: notoginsenoside R1 • PAI-1 • tissue factor • endotoxin • TNF-{alpha}




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