Data in Brief (Sep 2015)

Cerium oxide nanoparticles inhibit lipopolysaccharide induced MAP kinase/NF-kB mediated severe sepsis

  • Vellaisamy Selvaraj,
  • Niraj Nepal,
  • Steven Rogers,
  • Nandini D.P.K. Manne,
  • Ravikumar Arvapalli,
  • Kevin M. Rice,
  • Shinichi Asano,
  • Erin Fankenhanel,
  • J.Y. Ma,
  • Tolou Shokuhfar,
  • Mani Maheshwari,
  • Eric R. Blough

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.dib.2015.04.023
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. C
pp. 105 – 115

Abstract

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The life threatening disease of sepsis is associated with high mortality. Septic patient survivability with currently available treatments has failed to improve. The purpose of this study was to evaluate whether lipopolysaccharide (LPS) induced sepsis mortality and associated hepatic dysfunction can be prevented by cerium oxide nanoparticles (CeO2NPs) treatment in male Sprague Dawley rats. Here we provide the information about the methods processing of raw data related to our study published in Biomaterials (Selvaraj et al., Biomaterials, 2015, In press) and Data in Brief (Selvaraj et al., Data in Brief, 2015, In Press). The data present here provides confirmation of cerium oxide nanoparticle treatments ability to prevent the LPS induced sepsis associated changes in physiological, blood cell count, inflammatory protein and growth factors in vivo. In vitro assays investigation the treated of macrophages cells with different concentrations of cerium oxide nanoparticle demonstrate that concentration of cerium oxide nanoparticles below 1 µg/ml did not significantly influence cell survival as determined by the MTT assay.

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