MEASUREMENT OF NITRIC OXIDE PRODUCTION BY CHRONIC GRANULOMATOUS DISEASE PATIENTS

Tsuji S, Taniuchi S, Hasui M, Yamamoto A, Kobayashi Y

Department of Pediatrics, Kansai Medical University, Osaka, Japan

 

Objective: Nitric oxide synthase(NOS) in human neutrophils is not well characterized. We have evaluated the direct measurement of NO production in the patients with chronic granulomatous disease.

Methods: Venous blood was obtained from healthy volunteers and from patients with chronic granulomatous disease (CGD). One ml of whole blood was incubated with lipopolysaccharide (LPS), methylisothiourea (EIT) and 7-nitroindazole (7-NI). Then the mixture was incubated for the indicated periods of time, to which diaminofluorescein-2 (DAF-2) was added together with LPS, EIT and 7-NI 120 min before termination of the incubation period A mixture of whole blood, DCFH-DA and PMA was incubated. At the end of the incubation period, the sample was prepared for flow cytometry analysis.

Results: Intracellular NO production increased time-dependently when stimulated by LPS, and its inhibition by EIT. All PMNs from the patients with CGD failed to generate hydrogen peroxide, but NO production of CGD PMNs was significantly increased when compared with that of control PMNs (p<0.05).

Conclusion: A significantly higher NO production by CGD PMNs than control cells clearly indicates that DAF-2 does not measure hydrogen peroxide, and this observation may be ascribed to the failure of CGD PMNs to produce hydrogen peroxide and peroxynitrite. Therefore an overproduction of NO by PMNs of CGD patients may be explained by the overproduction of iNOS stimulated by several inflammatory cytokines.

 
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