Affiliation:
1. Departments of Molecular and Cellular Biochemistry1 and
2. Department of Biology, College of Natural Science,2 Kangwon National University, Chunchon, Kangwon-do, Korea
3. Pharmacology,3 College of Medicine, and
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Hemoglobin (Hb) is a toxic molecule responsible for the extreme lethality associated with experimental
Escherichia coli
peritonitis, but the mechanism has yet to be elucidated. Hb, but not globin, showed toxic effects in a live
E. coli
model but not in a model using killed
E. coli
. Methemoglobin, hematin, and the well-known Fenton reagents iron and iron-EDTA demonstrated the same lethal effect in
E. coli
peritonitis as Hb, while the addition of the Fenton inhibitors desferrioxamine (DF) and diethylenetriamine pentaacetate removed most of the cytotoxic activity of iron. Administration of a combined dose of superoxide dismutase and catalase minimized the action of Hb and iron-EDTA, suggesting that both O
2
⋅
−
and H
2
O
2
are involved in the toxic action of Hb in this rat model. The combination of the antioxidative enzymes and DF further suppressed iron-mediated lethality. An electron spin resonance technique with the spin-trapping reagent 5,5-dimethyl-1-pyroline-
N
-oxide (DMPO) showed O
2
⋅
−
generation in the peritoneal fluid of rats injected with
E. coli
alone or
E. coli
plus iron-DF, and
⋅
OH generation was detected in the peritoneal fluid of the rats injected with iron-EDTA. Hb did not show any spin adduct of oxygen radicals, suggesting that Hb produces non-spin-trapping radical ferryl ion, which decayed the spin adduct of DMPO. In the presence of Hb or iron-EDTA, O
2
−
-generating activity and viability of phagocytes decreased, whereas lipid peroxidation of peritoneal phagocytes increased. Generation of oxygen radicals and lipid peroxidation did not differ in the live and dead bacterial models. Bacterial numbers in the peritoneal cavity and blood were markedly increased in the live bacterial model with Hb and iron-EDTA. The Fenton inhibitor iron-DF prevented the loss of phagocyte function, lipid peroxidation, and bacterial proliferation. These results led us to conclude that the lethal toxicity of Hb in bacterial peritonitis is associated with a Fenton-type reaction, the products of which decrease phagocyte viability, through the induction of lipid peroxidation, allowing bacterial proliferation and resulting in mortality.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Microbiology (medical),Clinical Biochemistry,Immunology,Immunology and Allergy
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