The aim of the current study was to test potential cytoprotective and anti-inflammatory effects of the novel biological mediator hydrogen sulfide in murine models. Murine J774 macrophages were grown in culture and exposed to cytotoxic concentrations of nitrosoglutathione, or peroxynitrite (a reactive species formed from the reaction of nitric oxide and superoxide). Pretreatment of the cells with sodium sulfide (60–300 μM) reduced the loss of cell viability elicited by the nitric oxide donor compound (3 mM) or by peroxynitrite (3 mM), as measured by the MTT method. Sodium sulfide did not affect cell viability in the concentration range tested. In mice subjected to bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS, 5 mg/kg i.p.), treatment of the animals with sodium sulfide (0.2 mg/kg/hour for 4 hours, administered in Alzet minipumps) reduced the LPS-induced increase in plasma IL-1β and TNFα levels. These responses were attenuated when animals were pretreated with the heme oxygenase inhibitor tin-protoporphyrin IX (6 mg/kg). The current results point to the cytoprotective and anti-inflammatory effects of hydrogen sulfide, in cells exposed to nitrosative stress, and in animals subjected to endotoxemia.
. 2007 Mar 22;11(Suppl 2):P2. doi: 10.1186/cc5162
Cytoprotective and anti-inflammatory effects of hydrogen sulfide in macrophages and mice
C Szabo
1, L Kiss
1, E Pankotai
1
C Szabo
1University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey, Newark, NJ, USA
Find articles by C Szabo
E Pankotai
1University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey, Newark, NJ, USA
Find articles by E Pankotai
1University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey, Newark, NJ, USA
Supplement
27th International Symposium on Intensive Care and Emergency Medicine
Conference
27-30 March 2007
27th International Symposium on Intensive Care and Emergency Medicine
Brussels, Belgium
Issue date 2007.
Copyright © 2007 BioMed Central Ltd.
PMCID: PMC4095056
