Respiratory Research (Sep 2005)

Effects of cigarette smoke on degranulation and NO production by mast cells and epithelial cells

  • Hunt John E,
  • Heywood Gavin J,
  • Kumar Rakesh K,
  • Kim Henry S,
  • Wei Xiu M,
  • McNeil H Patrick,
  • Thomas Paul S

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/1465-9921-6-108
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 1
p. 108

Abstract

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Abstract Exhaled nitric oxide (eNO) is decreased by cigarette smoking. The hypothesis that oxides of nitrogen (NOX) in cigarette smoke solution (CSS) may exert a negative feedback mechanism upon NO release from epithelial (AEC, A549, and NHTBE) and basophilic cells (RBL-2H3) was tested in vitro. CSS inhibited both NO production and degranulation (measured as release of beta-hexosaminidase) in a dose-dependent manner from RBL-2H3 cells. Inhibition of NO production by CSS in AEC, A549, and NHTBE cells was also dose-dependent. In addition, CSS decreased expression of NOS mRNA and protein expression. The addition of NO inhibitors and scavengers did not, however, reverse the effects of CSS, nor did a NO donor (SNP) or nicotine mimic CSS. N-acetyl-cysteine, partially reversed the inhibition of beta-hexosaminidase release suggesting CSS may act via oxidative free radicals. Thus, some of the inhibitory effects of CSS appear to be via oxidative free radicals rather than a NOX -related negative feedback.

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