REDUCED SUPEROXIDE-DISMUTASE IN LUNG-CELLS OF PATIENTS WITH ASTHMA

Citation
Lj. Smith et al., REDUCED SUPEROXIDE-DISMUTASE IN LUNG-CELLS OF PATIENTS WITH ASTHMA, Free radical biology & medicine, 22(7), 1997, pp. 1301-1307
Citations number
54
Categorie Soggetti
Biology
ISSN journal
08915849
Volume
22
Issue
7
Year of publication
1997
Pages
1301 - 1307
Database
ISI
SICI code
0891-5849(1997)22:7<1301:RSILOP>2.0.ZU;2-1
Abstract
Lung cells recovered from symptomatic patients with asthma generate in creased amounts of reactive oxygen species (ROS). Animal and in vitro studies indicate that ROS can reproduce many of the features of asthma . The ability of ROS to produce the clinical features of asthma may de pend on an individual's lung antioxidant defenses. Patients with asthm a are reported to have reduced antioxidant defenses in peripheral bloo d, but little is known about the antioxidant defenses of their lung ce lls. To define lung cell antioxidant defenses in asthma, the glutathio ne concentration and the glutathione reductase, glutathione peroxidase , catalase, and superoxide dismutase (SOD) activities were measured in cells recovered by bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL cells) and by bronchia l brushing (bronchial epithelial cells, HBEC) from normal subjects and patients with asthma. Superoxide dismutase activity was reduced 25% i n BAL cells (p < .05) and nearly 50% in HBEC (p < .02) from patients w ith asthma. Alterations in the other antioxidants were not identified. A direct relationship was found between airway reactivity to methacho line, measured as PC(20)FEV(1), and HBEC SOD activity (r(2) = 89; p < .005), but not between airway reactivity and the other antioxidants. T he finding of reduced SOD activity in lung cells of patients with asth ma suggests that diminished SOD activity serves as a marker of the inf lammation characterizing asthma. Alternatively, it may play a role in the development or severity of the disease. (C) 1997 Elsevier Science Inc.